Los Angeles Times

Bristol-Myers in deal for Celgene

The $74-billion purchase would be the drug industry’s largest. Wall Street is wary.

- Bloomberg

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. agreed to acquire Celgene Corp. in a record $74-billion deal that would unite two drugmakers battling for advantage in a crowded market for innovative cancer treatments.

Both companies have faced investor wariness about their prospects in recent months. New Yorkbased Bristol makes an immunother­apy drug called Opdivo that accounts for roughly a quarter of its sales but that has trailed a rival medication from Merck & Co. Summit, N.J.-based Celgene, meanwhile, has been looking for a follow-up for its blockbuste­r blood-cancer therapy Revlimid.

The proposed union of the two companies, announced Thursday, represents a big bet that combined mass will help overcome the obstacles confrontin­g their respective cornerston­e products. It will also fan the flames of deal speculatio­n in an industry that’s coping with political pressure to rein in drug prices, the looming threat of expiring patents and disappoint­ing clinical trials for some cancer treatments.

If approved by shareholde­rs and regulators, the cash-and-stock deal would rank as the largest pharmaceut­ical-company acquisitio­n ever. Including net debt, the transactio­n values Celgene at $88.8 billion, surpassing Pfizer Inc.’s deal for Warner-Lambert.

Under the proposed terms, Celgene shareholde­rs would receive one BristolMye­rs Squibb share and $50 in cash for each Celgene share. That would value Celgene at $102.43 a share, a 54% premium to the stock’s Wednesday closing price.

Investors’ reactions suggested wariness. Celgene shares leaped 20.7% to $80.43 — well below the proposed deal price. Bristol shares slid 13.3% to $45.12.

Shares of both companies had been beaten down last year. Bristol-Myers shares declined more than 15% in 2018, while Celgene shares sank 39%.

The deal is Bristol’s largest under Chief Executive Giovanni Caforio, and comes after the drugmaker has suffered high-profile setbacks in immuno-oncology, its biggest line of business.

Given Opdivo’s large and growing share of its revenue, Bristol has been under pressure to diversify. In a recent earnings call, Caforio said that the company would look to deals to diversify its pipeline. At various points in recent years as Bristol has stumbled with trial failures, its name has come up as a takeout target itself.

In buying Celgene, Bristol would get control of one of the most successful cancer drugs of recent years: top-selling blood-cancer therapy Revlimid, which costs more than $100,000 a year. It would also gain a promising experiment­al CAR-T therapy being developed by Juno Therapeuti­cs, which Celgene acquired in a $9-billion takeover deal last year.

Caforio said on a call with analysts on Thursday that the deal “is not about Revlimid” and that the two companies had been discussing a potential tie-up for some time. He said that the combined companies anticipate six product launches over the next 12 to 24 months.

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