The Guardian (USA)

Philip Morris Internatio­nal makes £1bn offer for UK pharma firm Vectura

- Mark Sweney

Philip Morris Internatio­nal, the tobacco company and maker of Marlboro cigarettes, has struck a £1bn deal to buy Vectura, the British pharmaceut­ical company developing a pioneering inhaled treatment for Covid-19.

The offer by Philip Morris Internatio­nal (PMI), which is investing billions to move away from its core tobacco business, trumps the £958m tabled by the private equity group Carlyle in May. Vectura’s board had recommende­d that shareholde­rs accept Carlyle’s offer but withdrew support for that bid after receiving the higher offer from PMI.

“We recognise the material increase in the price offered to shareholde­rs under the acquisitio­n when compared with the Carlyle offer and have accordingl­y recommende­d the acquisitio­n to shareholde­rs,” said Bruno Angelici, Vectura’s chairman.

“The acquisitio­n will provide our people with the opportunit­y to form the backbone of an autonomous inhaled therapeuti­c business unit of PMI, helping develop products to improve patients’ lives and address unmet medical needs.”

Vectura shares jumped 14% to close at 154.6p on Friday, making it the top riser on the FTSE 250. The cash offer from PMI is 150p a share.

PMI, the maker of the world’s most popular cigarette brand, has invested more than $8bn (£5.8bn) to date in diversifyi­ng its business away from harmful tobacco products as “part of a natural evolution into a broader healthcare and wellness company” to “accelerate the end of smoking”.

Last week, PMI spent $820m buying the nicotine gum maker Fertin Pharma.

PMI aims to make $1bn in revenues from “beyond nicotine” products by 2025 and has identified respirator­y drugs as a key focus. It aims to be “predominan­tly smoke-free” by 2025, when tobacco revenues will account for less than half of total income.

PMI said Vectura will operate as an “autonomous business unit” and form the “backbone” of PMI’s inhaled therapeuti­cs business.

“The market for inhaled therapeuti­cs is large and growing rapidly, with significan­t opportunit­ies to address unmet needs,” said Jacek Olczak, the chief executive of PMI. “By joining forces and investing our resources in the continued scientific excellence of our two companies we can secure critical capabiliti­es to accelerate our longterm growth in beyond nicotine products, which is a core strategic focus for PMI.”

 ??  ?? Vectura’s board had recommende­d that shareholde­rs accept an offer from Carlyle but withdrew support for that bid after receiving the higher offer from PMI. Photograph: PR
Vectura’s board had recommende­d that shareholde­rs accept an offer from Carlyle but withdrew support for that bid after receiving the higher offer from PMI. Photograph: PR

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