The Star Late Edition

Indivior shares gain on FDA addiction ruling

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of its shares and pay a full-year dividend of ¥96 per share. It also said it was amending the shareholde­r return policy, targeting a 30 percent dividend payout ratio.

Shares of Honda rose 1.5 percent to ¥3 576 in Tokyo trading before the earnings announceme­nt.

The stock has gained 4.7 percent this year, compared with a 2.3 percent advance for Toyota and 5.7 percent drop for Nissan. – Bloomberg INDIVIOR shares surged the most in three months after a US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) panel backed the company’s treatment for addiction to opioids, the pain drugs linked to thousands of annual deaths. Agency advisers voted 18 to 1 in support of the drug, known as RBP-6000, Indivior said. The FDA is poised to make a decision by the end of the month on the therapy, which is expected by analysts to generate $739 million (R10.42 billion) in annual sales in 2021. Meanwhile, the regulatory panel is scheduled to review a competing therapy, from Camurus and Braeburn Pharmaceut­icals yesterday. Access to the US market would come at a timely moment for Indivior, allowing the drug maker to tap the demand for new addiction treatments amid a rising tide of opioid overdose deaths that prompted President Donald Trump to declare a public health emergency last month. FDA commission­er Scott Gottlieb has moved to encourage therapies for dependence and addiction using less harmful opioids such as buprenorph­ine, the active ingredient in Indivior’s sustained-release drug. Shares of the Slough, UK-based drugmaker rose almost 12 percent to 415.60 pence (R77.54) at 9.16am in London, their biggest intraday gain since July 27. Indivior’s product is designed to treat opioid use disorder, the prolonged use of the painkiller­s for no legitimate medical purpose. – Bloomberg IRELAND

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