Arab Times

Cameron says making good progress on Pfizer pledges

Bid to protect jobs, research

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LONDON, May 11, (RTRS): British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Sunday he had made very good progress in securing guarantees from Pfizer over the US drugmaker’s $106 billion bid to buy AstraZenec­a.

Pfizer’s pursuit of Britain’s secondlarg­est drugmaker has sparked a political storm in Britain, with the government initially accused of acting as cheerleade­r for what would be the country’s largest foreign takeover.

With the opposition Labour party leading the complaints, Cameron is now seeking to protect jobs and scientific research while also sending the message that Britain remains open to investment from foreign companies.

“I think the right thing to do is to engage,” Cameron told BBC Television. “To get stuck in with these companies, as I’ve done and my team of ministers has done, to make sure we get good guarantees and the best deal for Britain. We’ve made some very good progress.”

Pfizer has already given a five-year commitment to complete AstraZenec­a’s new research centre in Cambridge, retain a factory in the northweste­rn English town of Macclesfie­ld and put a fifth of its research staff in Britain if the deal goes ahead.

But the US firm has also said it could adjust those promises if circumstan­ces change “significan­tly”, prompting demands for more watertight pledges.

“Don’t underestim­ate the power of some of the things they have already said, about making sure, for instance, that 20 percent of their R&D jobs will be here in the UK,” Cameron said. “Now I want more.”

Pfizer on Saturday sought to fight back against the mounting criticism, saying Britain’s expertise in research was a key reason for the deal. Chief Executive Ian Read will take that message with him when he appears before two panels of British lawmakers this week to face questions over the takeover.

Pfizer is widely expected to come back with a sweetened offer for AstraZenec­a this week, though people familiar with the matter said it was likely to wait until after the select committee hearings on May 13 and 14.

The British group has rejected successive approaches from its larger American rival, and Chief Executive Pascal Soriot has been on a roadshow with advisers to meet leading investors and lay out his strategy for a prosperous independen­t future.

Soriot has secured the backing of several high-profile shareholde­rs, but others have told Reuters they would like him to engage with Pfizer if the US group makes an improved offer.

Under British takeover rules, Pfizer has until May 26 to make a firm bid for AstraZenec­a or walk away.

Though the government has only limited legal power to block any merger, Cameron said his business secretary Vince Cable was examining the issue of a public interest test and would report back to parliament to give his findings.

But the Prime Minister, head of the free-market Conservati­ve Party, noted that Britain did not want to be seen to be pulling up the drawbridge to foreign companies and said AstraZenec­a had itself benefited from buying foreign companies.

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