The Day

PFIZER, ALLERGAN IN TALKS TO CREATE DRUG GIANT

- By LINDA A. JOHNSON AP Business Writer

Trenton, N.J. — Pfizer and Botox maker Allergan are discussing a potential deal that could be the biggest of 2015, a year marked by a rapid-fire pace of megadeals, particular­ly in health care.

A merger could enable Viagra maker Pfizer, the world’s second-biggest drugmaker by revenue, to surpass Switzerlan­d’s Novartis AG and regain the industry’s top spot. It would also add Allergan’s brand-name medicines for eye conditions, infections and heart disease to Pfizer’s extensive portfolio of vaccines and drugs for cancer, pain, erectile dysfunctio­n and other conditions.

In separate statements, both companies on Thursday said they were in “preliminar­y friendly discussion­s.” Allergan Plc said there’s no certainty that the talks with Pfizer Inc. will lead to a deal. Story,

Trenton, N. J. — Pfizer and Botox maker Allergan are discussing a potential deal that could be the biggest of 2015, a year marked by a rapid-fire pace of megadeals, particular­ly in health care.

A merger could enable Viagra maker Pfizer, the world’s second-biggest drugmaker by revenue, to surpass Switzerlan­d’s Novartis AG and regain the industry’s top spot. It would also add Allergan’s brand- name medicines for eye conditions, infections and heart disease to Pfizer’s extensive portfolio of vaccines and drugs for cancer, pain, erectile dysfunctio­n and other conditions.

In separate statements, both companies on Thursday said they were in “preliminar­y friendly discussion­s.” Allergan Plc said there’s no certainty that the talks with Pfizer Inc. will lead to a deal.

However, Allergan shares jumped 7.1 percent to $307.72 in afternoon trading. Pfizer shares dipped nearly 2 percent to $34.78.

The talks come amid the latest wave of health care consolidat­ion, which includes brand-name and generic drugmakers as well as insurers, pharmacy chains and drug wholesal- ers— all groups trying to boost bargaining clout. Allergan, based in Dublin, is in the process of selling its generics unit to Israel’s Teva Pharmacuet­icals Industries Ltd., the world’s top generic drugmaker.

Pfizer has been hurt by a wave of generic versions of one-time blockbuste­r drugs like cholestero­l fighter Lipitor entering the market, reducing company sales by a total of $28 billion from 2010 through next year. It has a history of making large acquisitio­ns to boost revenue, gain promising drugs in developmen­t and cut

costs. It’s done three sizable deals since 2000, acquiring Warner-Lambert and Pharmacia before paying a whopping $68 billion for Wyeth in 2009.

Pfizer’s $49.6 billion in revenue last year dwarfs Allergan’s $4.6 billion, but a deal for Allergan would allow for additional growth and Pfizer might pursue an “inversion.” That’s a tax-saving maneuver in which a U.S. company reincorpor­ates in a country with a lower corporate tax rate.

Inversions have become a hot political topic, raising the ire of lawmakers in Washington and public interest groups as well.

Pfizer, based in New York, spent months in the spring of last year pursuing another top 10 drugmaker, Britain’s AstraZenec­a PLC, in an attempted inversion, but those talks eventually collapsed when the two sides couldn’t agree on a price. Pfizer was willing to pay $118 billion.

However, with other companies announcing or pursuing inversions, the Obama administra­tion acted.

By the end of the year, the U.S. Treasury Department had initiated new regulation­s designed to limit the financial benefits of inversions. The rules, among other things, bar certain techniques that companies use to lower their tax bills and they tightened ownership requiremen­ts.

Last week, billionair­e investor Carl Icahn announced that he was setting up a $150 million super PAC bent on revising U.S. corporate tax law and ending the practice of inversions, ratcheting up political pressure even more.

Pfizer said in its statement that it won’t comment “on speculatio­n regarding the terms of a potential transactio­n.

“Any further announceme­nt will be made if and when appropriat­e,” Pfizer said.

If Pfizer goes forward, given Allergan’s market capitaliza­tion of about $ 113 billion before deal talks surfaced, it would be the biggest buyout of the year, more expensive even than Anheuser Busch InBev’s $106 billion bid for SABMiller.

And some industry analysts say the price tag for Allergan could be much higher.

Analysts who follow Pfiz- er were not surprised that deal talks were underway, but warned that an inversion might trigger a more intense pushback from Washington.

That could compound public anger over soaring prices for prescripti­on drugs, which have become another big issue in the 2016 presidenti­al race.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D- New York, issued a statement Thursday saying, “The continued pursuit of inversions, mergers and foreign acquisitio­ns of major U. S. companies for purely tax purposes shows there is a lot more work to be done to stop them.”

According to SanfordBer­nstein analyst Dr. Timothy Anderson, an all-stock deal is likely, because Allergan shareholde­rs would own at least 40 percent of the combined company, a level that would allow Pfizer to get full tax relief under Treasury’s new ownership thresholds. Pfizer’s current tax rate is about 25 percent and Allergan’s around 15 percent, he noted.

Beyond any potential tax benefits, Anderson called the deal a good fit.

 ?? RICHARD DREW AP PHOTO ?? Pfizer’s logo is displayed on a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Thursday.
RICHARD DREW AP PHOTO Pfizer’s logo is displayed on a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Thursday.

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