The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pfizer announces deal with Mylan

- By Linda A. Johnson

Pfizer is spinning off a big chunk of the company, culminatin­g a rare tear of major deals aimed at reshaping the drugmaker into a slimmed-down version with faster, more-sustainabl­e growth.

The biggest U.S.-based drugmaker announced the latest move on Monday — combining its Upjohn business, which sells offpatent former blockbuste­r drugs, with generic drugmaker Mylan into a new company to be created next year — as it reported a 30% jump in second-quarter profits.

“These are deliberate steps that we are taking to make Pfizer a very different company,” new Chief Executive Dr. Albert Bourla told analysts during a conference call to discuss the Mylan deal and the latest financial results.

Among the steps since Bourla took the helm in January are the just-completed acquisitio­n of biotech company Therachon Holding AG, to gain an experiment­al drug that could be the first treatment for a type of dwarfism called achondropl­asia; the pending $11.4 billion acquisitio­n of Array BioPharma Inc., which sells two melanoma drugs and is developing additional medicines for cancer and other conditions with limited treatments; and the Aug. 1 start of a joint venture combining Pfizer’s consumer health products with those of British drugmaker GlaxoSmith­Kline Plc.

Pfizer just created the Upjohn business at the beginning of this year, by peeling off carefully selected off-patent drugs that were part of Pfizer’s establishe­d products division. Upjohn now sells

many of Pfizer’s greatest hits from the past quartercen­tury that have generic competitio­n but still sell well in many countries: Viagra, painkiller­s Celebrex and Lyrica, Norvasc for high blood pressure, Effexor

for severe heartburn, Xanax for anxiety and Zoloft for depression. Those drugs contribute­d about 23% of Pfizer’s total sales last year.

“We believe that this transactio­n checks all the boxes,” Bourla said, by setting up a new company with an attractive dividend, strong management, and a huge portfolio and network of factories around the world.

Mylan sells a broad mix of generic pills and shots for infectious diseases and heart conditions, plus the EpiPen auto-injector for stopping allergic reactions, a product Pfizer manufactur­es for Mylan.

Meanwhile, Pfizer reported second-quarter net income of $5.05 billion, or 89 cents per share, up from $3.87 billion, or 65 cents per

share, a year earlier. Earnings, adjusted for non-recurring gains and gains related to mergers and acquisitio­ns, amounted to 80 cents per share in the latest quarter, 3 cents better than Wall Street analysts expected.

The New York-based drugmaker posted revenue of $13.26 billion, down 2% from $13.47 billion in the

year-ago quarter.

Sales were led by Lyrica, breast cancer drug Ibrance, the Prevnar 13 vaccine against pneumococc­al infections and stroke preventer Eliquis. The new Upjohn business posted revenue of $2.81 billion, down 11%. The newly organized biopharmac­euticals business, which sells Pfizer’s brand-name prescripti­on

drugs and vaccines, brought in $9.6 billion, up 2%, while the consumer health business had revenue of $862 million, down 3%.

Pfizer said it now expects full-year earnings in the range of $2.76 to $2.86 per share, down 7 cents from its prior forecast, and revenue in the range of $50.5 billion to $52.5 billion, down $1.5 billion from its earlier forecast.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? RELPAX migraine pills are manufactur­ed by Pfizer Inc., the biggest U.S.-based drugmaker. The firm reported a 30% jump in secondquar­ter profits on Monday.
WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE RELPAX migraine pills are manufactur­ed by Pfizer Inc., the biggest U.S.-based drugmaker. The firm reported a 30% jump in secondquar­ter profits on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States