National Post

Sick leave Valeant names trio of execs to fill in for ill CEO, Michael Pearson.

- By Ransdell Pierson

• Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. on Monday said a group of company executives will immediatel­y take over for its chief executive officer until he returns from medical leave, news that sent its shares tumbling 10 per cent.

The Quebec company said CEO Michael Pearson, 56, was being treated for severe pneumonia.

The decision to put leadership in the hands of three executives was unusual, experts said, and suggested a lack of confidence in any one company executive to temporaril­y fill Pearson’s shoes.

Valeant and Pearson have come under pressure for steep price increases on some drugs and for close ties to a specialty pharmacy that used aggressive methods to overcome insurer barriers to reimbursin­g its medicines.

Pearson was hospitaliz­ed with the lung condition on Friday. A company spokeswoma­n declined on Monday to say whether he had experience­d any complicati­ons or when he might return, adding it was honouring a family request for privacy.

“It is an inopportun­e time for their leader to take sick leave after the company has faced credibilit­y issues in recent months,” said Morningsta­r analyst Damien Conover. “If the company was on solid footing, it wouldn’t be as much of an issue.”

Valeant said its board has created an “office of the Chief Executive Officer,” which will include general counsel Robert Chai- Onn, group chairman Ari Kellen, and chief financial officer Robert Rosiello.

The board also created a committee to oversee and support the office of the CEO, including lead independen­t director Robert Ingram, president of ValueAct Capital Mason Morfit, and former Valeant CFO Howard Schiller.

Jerome Reisman, a partner in the law firm Reisman Peirez Reisman and Capobianco of Garden City, New York, said Valeant’s three- member CEO committee will likely prove too cumbersome.

“With all these kings they’re appointing to the troika, nobody will be able to make decisions,” said Reisman, a financial legal consultant to numerous drugmakers. “A committee on a committee just won’t work. You need a strong CEO.”

Dr. Bruce Hirsch, an infectious disease specialist at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, New York, said the vast majority of patients with pneumonia fully recover thanks to effective antibiotic­s. But others are slow to recover and can be tired for months afterward, he said, particular­ly if they have preexistin­g structural lung disease, including damage from emphysema, bronchitis, asthma and smoking.

He noted pneumonia can be caused by a range of bacteria, viruses, fungi, as well as inflammati­on, and in very severe cases can cause heart attacks or heart failure.

Pearson, who joined Valeant as CEO in 2010 after a 23- year career at consultanc­y McKinsey & Co, has made rapid- fire acquisitio­ns that greatly increased its size and share price. But its stock has plunged more than 60 per cent since August, due largely to questions about Valeant’s marketing practices and the sustainabi­lity of its business model.

Investors have been turning up pressure on the Laval, Que.- based company to provide a more detailed plan on how it will boost profits in 2016.

Under a deal announced this month, Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc will take over many functions previously handled by Philidor Rx Services. Valeant cut ties with the specialty pharmacy in response to allegation­s of aggressive billing practices. Valeant shares fell 10.5 per cent to US$102.14 on the New York Stock Exchange.

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