Business Standard

Indian pharma should look beyond generics

Players need to step up investment in newer areas such as specialty drugs and biosimilar­s

- AJAY SRINIVASAN The author is director, CR IS IL Research

The generics segment isn’t quite the goose it once was, or so the trend in the pharmaceut­icals industry appears to suggest. Between 2004 and 2014, the global generics industry logged a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 16 per cent in revenue. But the steam ran out in 2015 and 2016, and growth plunged to 6 per cent.

The impact was particular­ly severe for Indian generics players, who saw growth plummet to 2 per cent in the last two years, compared with a staggering 23 per cent in the preceding decade. There are many reasons why growth is unlikely to recover unless the players step up investment­s in newer areas such as specialty drugs and biosimilar­s. Indeed, CRISIL Research expects the subdued trend to continue in the medium term, with Indian pharmaceut­ical exports growing in mid-single digits.

Indian generics exports to the regulated markets of the US and the UK face multiple headwinds, including shrinking market opportunit­y in convention­al generics, increasing pricing pressure as competitio­n intensifie­s, and consolidat­ion of buyers in the US wholesale market. To elaborate, the patent-expiry opportunit­y in convention­al generics is expected to halve to $52 billion during 2016-2021, compared with the preceding five. Then, competitio­n is intensifyi­ng, with the average number of competitor­s for large Indian companies rising from 3 per drug in 2012 to 4.6 per drug in 2016. Further, with only 3 wholesaler­s constituti­ng 80 per cent of the market share in the US, players bargaining power has reduced.

Meanwhile, there are huge prospects emerging in segments such as biosimilar­s and specialty drugs. Biosimilar­s are generic versions of a biologic drug, while specialty drugs include complex generics — used to treat chronic or life threatenin­g diseases and branded drugs — versions of already approved drugs enhanced through different dosage or new routes of administra­tion.

CRISIL Research estimates the market opportunit­y due to biosimilar and complex generic drugs going off patent at $100-110 billion in the next 5 years. To be sure, close to 60 per cent of the top 50 drugs (by sales value) going off patent during the next decade are biologics. Competitio­n for these drugs is substantia­lly lower because the investment needed is 8-10 times higher and these involve relatively higher level of complexity. A CRISIL Research analysis of 15 major generics players — six Indian and nine global — together accounting for 60 per cent of generic sales in the regulated markets indicate global players have a headstart in investing in the required focus areas.

For these global players, the specialty segment accounted for 38 per cent of the aggregate revenues in 2016, up from 25 per cent in 2012. While some of this growth has come through the acquisitio­n route, the gap is significan­t neverthele­ss, considerin­g the contributi­on of specialty products to the topline of Indian players is still in single digits. About 42 biosimilar­s have been approved in the regulated markets during 2013-2016, double that in the 7 years prior to that (2006 -2012). The global players accounted for 24 per cent of these approvals, compared with a paltry 4 per cent for the large Indian players.

These data points indicate a sharper focus of and bigger investment­s by the global players in newer areas. For example, Teva, the largest global one considered, invested close to $37,500 per employee on R&D annually in the last 3 years, compared with $20,000 by Sun Pharmaceut­icals, the largest Indian player. In 2016, the median investment in R&D was around $19,500 per employee for the global players, and around 30% lower for the six Indian players.

These investment­s have, however, taken a toll on the return ratios of the global players — their average return on capital employed during 2014-2016 was 7.5 per cent, compared with 22 per cent for the Indian companies. What’s more, the gearing has increased for the global players (0.5 times in 2011 to 1.0 times in 2016) but remained more or less stable for Indian players (0.5 times).

It follows, therefore, that Indian players are well-placed to capitalise on the impending opportunit­y in biosimilar­s and specialty segment, either through organic or inorganic means, given their strong balance sheets and healthy cash flows. But much more needs to be done. The battle to expand product lines will require Indian players to strengthen supply chains and improve engagement with stakeholde­rs which will escalate their costs. Also, the marketing expenses incurred in selling a specialty product and biosimilar would be roughly three times the cost incurred in selling a convention­al drug. However, it’s a bullet they must bite in order to stay relevant in the regulated markets, and counter the slowdown. Indian generics players spend much less than global peers on R&D.

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