Scottish Daily Mail

‘Very unattracti­ve’ Britain leaves Astra eyeing China

- By Calum Muirhead

tHe boss of drugmaker astraZenec­a blasted high taxes in the UK as he touted China as the next big growth region – declaring the country ‘completely open’ to foreign firms.

pascal Soriot, the chief executive of the FtSe 100 group, said Britain was ‘very unattracti­ve for companies to invest’ and warned it was difficult for pharma firms to establish manufactur­ing bases in Britain.

the comments came as he said astra ‘definitely could make acquisitio­ns’ in China, a country where it has signed several licensing partnershi­ps.

Soriot, who has just spent two weeks there, said China has seen an ‘explosion of biotech companies’ working on new medicines and there was no pressure from jurisdicti­ons such as europe and the US to discourage it from making investment­s there.

‘there is no limitation to this,’ Soriot said. it came as the anglo-Swedish firm posted better-than-expected results for the first three months of this year. revenue dipped 4pc yearon-year to £8.7bn, weighed down by a 98pc drop in sales of Covid vaccine vaxzevria to £22.5m.

and revenues from evusheld, its antibody treatment for the virus, plunged 73pc to £102m after US regulators removed its use authorisat­ion because it proved ineffectiv­e at combating sub-variants of the virus.

But there was a 19pc jump in cancer drug sales. excluding Covid remedies, total sales were up 10pc at £8.6bn. the group also maintained its guidance for the full year, predicting revenue growth of a ‘low-to-mid singledigi­t percentage’ for 2023.

the results came ahead of its annual general meeting, at which Soriot swatted away a challenge to his leadership by shareholde­r advisory firm pirc, which wanted his removal amid concerns over mounting legal battles which it said ‘could financiall­y or reputation­ally impact the company’. Shares fell 0.4pc, or 48p, to 11,796p.

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