Daily Mail

Drug-fixing scandal hits Alliance Pharma shares

- By Calum Muirhead

AIM-listed Alliance Pharma suffered a blow as competitio­n regulators moved to ban its boss following a drug-pricing scandal.

Peter Butterfiel­d, who has run the firm since 2018, is facing a competitio­n disqualifi­cation order (CDO) from the Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) after Alliance and three other healthcare groups were fined £35m amid accusation­s of conspiring to restrict the supply of prochlorpe­razine, a medicine designed to treat nausea, dizziness and migraines.

The agreement is alleged to have caused the price of the drug paid by the NHS to skyrocket from £6.49 for a pack of 50 tablets to £51.68 between 2013 and 2017 – a rise of 700pc. Alliance said it was ‘very disappoint­ed’ by the CMA’s decision to disqualify Butterfiel­d and that it ‘fundamenta­lly disagrees’ with the regulator’s decision to fine the firm which it is appealing against.

‘Alliance reiterates that it did not participat­e in, or profit from, any market sharing arrangemen­t and refutes any involvemen­t by the company or Mr Butterfiel­d, who retains the full confidence and support of the board,’ it added.

The company’s shares tumbled 13.37pc, or 12.5p, to 81p following the news.

Aside from Butterfiel­d, the CMA is also seeking CDOs against several other individual­s connected to firms involved in the scandal including fellow Alliance Pharma director John Dawson and executives from Lexon UK, Focus Pharmaceut­icals and Medreich.

In total, seven company directors face disqualifi­cation as a result of the incident. The FTSE 100 rose 1.86pc, or 132.69 points, to 7281.19 while the FTSE 250 was up 1.94pc, or 359.48 points, at 18853.22. An end- of-week rally helped offset some of the losses in the market following Thursday’s declines, led by rebounds in shares initially caught up in the sell-off.

Among these was investment firm Abrdn, which gained 7.45pc, or 10.55p, to 152.1p, while RollsRoyce rose 5.27pc, or 3.76p, to 75.07p and miner Fresnillo added 5.5pc, or 36.2p, to 693.8p.

Oil stocks received a boost as crude prices rebounded amid prediction­s the OPEC+ cartel will decide to cut production at a meeting next week.

Brent crude was trading near $95 a barrel, lifting shares in BP 2.83pc, or 12.5p, to 453.70p while Shell was up 2.24pc, or 51p, at 2324p despite reports about the impending departure of its boss Ben van Beurden.

The oil price rise lifted other energy stocks, with Harbour Energy, the North Sea’s biggest producer, rising 0.81pc, or 3.8p, to 473p. But the rally in the blue-chip index was tempered by the housebuild­ers, which slipped back after analysts at HSBC struck a pessimisti­c tone on the sector while downgradin­g companies across the board. The investment bank predicted demand for housing could fall by 20pc over the coming year, triggering a 7.5pc decline in house prices, with central London seeing a fall of double that.

Analysts downgraded Barratt (down 1.23pc, or 5.1p, to 410.1p) and Persimmon (down 1.90pc, or 28p, to 1442p) to ‘hold’ from ‘buy’ while Berkeley (down 2.7pc, or 97p, to 3492p) was knocked to ‘reduce’ from ‘hold.’

Other firms had better luck among the brokers, with British Gas owner Centrica adding 2.43pc, or 1.86p, to 78.38p after analysts at RBC hiked their target price on the stock to 140p from 125p.

Meanwhile, e-commerce group Zamaz made its debut on the London market, becoming only the second firm to list on the LSE through a direct listing, a process where a firm sells shares directly to the public rather than through intermedia­ries as is the case with an initial public offering (IPO).

The stock ended its first session priced at 9.48p.

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