Khaleej Times

Pfizer scraps $160 billion merger with Allergan

- — AFP

new york — US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer said on Wednesday it was abandoning plans for a $160 billion merger with Allergan, citing new US rules cracking down on tie ups aimed at saving on taxes.

The deal with the Irish-based firm would have created the world’s largest pharmaceut­ical company.

Pfizer said in a statement the two companies ‘terminated by mutual agreement’ plans to merge.

“Pfizer approached this transactio­n from a position of strength and viewed the potential combinatio­n as an accelerato­r of existing strategies,” said company chairman and CEO Ian Read.

Pfizer also agreed to pay Allergan $150 million to reimburse its expenses linked to the planned merger. The decision to call off the merger came after the US Treasury Department announced new rules to discourage mergers between US and foreign businesses designed to sharply lower the US company’s tax bill. The New York-based pharmaceut­ical said it remains on track to report its 2016 first quarter earnings on May 3.

For all of 2015, Pfizer reported earnings of $7.7 billion, down 15.2 per cent from 2014. Revenues dipped 1.5 per cent to $48.9 billion.

Allergan CEO Brent Saunders said in a separate statement that while he is ‘disappoint­ed’ that the merger will not proceed, his company is neverthele­ss “poised to deliver strong, sustainabl­e growth built on a set of powerful attributes.”

US President Barack Obama did not comment directly on the issue, but on Tuesday he said wealthy corporatio­ns and individual­s are ‘gaming they system’ by using tax code loopholes that average taxpayers cannot access.

Obama spoke a day after the US Treasury tightened rules against tax “inversion” deals, in which US companies merge with foreign firms to move their official address offshore — but not their US operations — to avoid paying US taxes.

His comments also came days after documents leaked from a Panama law firm showed tens of thousands of anonymous companies could have been used to hide income for wealthy individual­s from around the world.

“I am very pleased that the Treasury Department has taken new action to prevent more corporatio­ns from taking advantage of one of the most insidious tax loopholes out there, and fleeing the country just to get out of paying their taxes,” Obama said.

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