China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Medicine trade tops $100b in 2015

- By WANG WEN wangwen@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s trade in medicines hit an all-time high of $102 billion last year.

The latest figures from the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Medicines and Health Products show the value was a 4.73 percent increase on 2014, and this year total export-import volumes are expected to rise again, by 3 to 5 percent.

Xu Ming, the chamber’s deputy director, called the overall growth “healthy and stable”, adding, however, that the Chinese export market had slowed.

Medicine imports were worth $46.2 billion, up 7.3 percent, while exports grew a slower 2.7 percent to $56.4 billion.

“That import growth indicates the Chinese domestic market has huge potential, as it is now the second-largest globally after the United States,” said Xu.

The weaker export figures were largely indicative of an ongoing global economic slowdown, Xu said, and coupled with a weaker yuan, they put China on the back foot as an internatio­nal medicine supplier.

Exports to the US performed well, even though some other main markets dropped. Volumes to the US grew 7.72 percent compared with the previous year and it is now China’s second-largest medicine export market after Europe, where demand dropped 0.22 percent.

Xu remains positive that Chinese companies are making strong headway in their moves to expand trade abroad.

Some have been expanding through investment and merger, which is often a more complicate­d route than simply selling their products directly.

“It’s astonishin­g how some Chinese companies have performed so well in overseas investment­s,” Xu said.

One of the sector’s most significan­t developmen­ts in 2015 was by a consortium led by Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceut­ical Group Co Ltd, which bought Ambrx Inc, a US biotechnol­ogy company focusing on molecular medicine.

The acquisitio­n group also involved HOPU Jinghua (Beijing) Investment Consultanc­y Co Ltd, China Everbright Ltd‘s healthcare fund, and Wuxi PharmaTech, and the purchase included some valuable global biotechnol­ogy.

Fosun Pharma’s Chairman Chen Qiyu said the acquisitio­n would “produce a dramatic synergisti­c effect on Fosun’s current developmen­t system”.

Ambrx is now expected to build a global products developmen­t center in China, Chen said.

Other moves saw Chinese companies signing agreements with foreign companies to sell their products overseas.

Jiangsu Heng Rui Medicine Co Ltd, for instance, authorized US-based pharmaceut­ical company Incyte Corp to develop and sell its PD-1 antibody product outside China in September, with the Delaware firm paying $795 million for the right.

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