Sector News

CEO-hunting Sanofi tried to tempt AstraZeneca’s Soriot: Bloomberg

October 30, 2014
Life sciences
Bernstein analyst Tim Anderson figures Sanofi would do well to look outside the company for its new CEO, like AstraZeneca did with its new-ish chief, Pascal Soriot. Well, Sanofi had a more literal view: The French drugmaker has contacted Soriot himself.
 
Sanofi’s board sacked CEO Chris Viehbacher Wednesday, ending an 8-year tenure full of buyouts, job cuts, international expansion and R&D restructuring. Apparently, that tenure also included conflict with the board, at least in recent months. Chairman Serge Weinberg said the board wants to work more closely and cooperatively with a CEO; Weinberg has been casting about for a potential replacement since early September at least.
 
As Bloomberg reports, Sanofi’s board approached Soriot to see if he might be interested in the job. According to the news service’s sources, Soriot wasn’t.
 
Soriot joined AstraZeneca in 2012  from Roche, where he ran the Swiss drugmaker’s pharma division. He has his hands full at AstraZeneca, which has been struggling to replace revenue lost to generic competition, particularly for its antipsychotic drug Seroquel. Like Viehbacher, he has made a series of deals designed to restock the company’s pipeline and rolled out a restructuring with thousands of job cuts. Unlike Viehbacher, Soriot had to contend with a hostile bid from Pfizer, which gave up its takeover quest in May–at least temporarily.
 
That Sanofi would reach out to Soriot might soothe investors and analysts worried that Sanofi will return to its insular, France-centric ways. But then again, Soriot is French–and as Bloomberg points out, he worked at Aventis before his career at Roche. Sanofi’s previous moniker was Sanofi-Aventis, of course, which means Soriot has been in the family.
 
Another potential CEO, according to Bloomberg’s sources, is Smith & Nephew chief Olivier Bohuon, who’s also French, with stints at the France-based drugmaker Pierre Fabre, as well as U.S.-based Abbott Laboratories and U.K. drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline. Then there’s Roch Doliveux, who’s leaving the Belgian drugmaker UCB as of Jan. 1, the news service’s sources said.
 
By Tracy Staton
 

comments closed

Related News

May 17, 2024

With new partnership, Galapagos takes decentralized CAR-T manufacturing quest nationwide

Life sciences

Though Galapagos has undergone plenty of staff shake-ups and strategy revamps in recent years, the company is sticking strong to the CAR-T pivot first unveiled by CEO Paul Stoffels, M.D., following his arrival at the biotech from Johnson & Johnson in early 2022.

May 17, 2024

Sanofi invests €1 Billion to boost drug manufacturing in France

Life sciences

The new investment is expected to create more than 500 jobs and significantly strengthen France’s ability to control the production of essential medicines from start to finish, the company stated. According to Sanofi, this plan increases the amount Sanofi has committed to major projects in France since the Covid-19 pandemic to over €3.5 billion.

May 17, 2024

Lonza, busy with capacity upgrades and exec turnover, hints at CDMO industry rebound

Life sciences

A tough biotech funding environment and a downturn in COVID-related contracts has weighed heavily on CDMOs of all stripes in recent years. Now, with a new CEO waiting in the wings, Swiss manufacturing juggernaut Lonza is attempting to reassure the market that an industry stabilization is on the horizon.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach