Sector News

Kiss more pharma jobs goodbye: Pierre Fabre to cut 550 in sales, R&D

December 11, 2014
Life sciences
Pierre Fabre hasn’t had an easy time in the drug business lately. Its R&D operations have been less than productive, executives say, and sales in its home country have suffered from price cuts.
 
So, it’s scaling back in pharma to narrow its R&D focus, build up in consumer healthcare and spend more resources on its cosmetics and dermatology businesses. The upshot? Pierre Fabre will shrink its pharma payroll by 551 jobs by 2016. The cuts will mainly affect its French operations, with sales and R&D both in the target zone.
 
The larger cuts will come in R&D, which will lose 272 jobs, 255 in France, the company said in a statement. Another 279 or so will hit on the sales side. The rest will come from an R&D site in Barcelona that’s slated for closure.
 
The job cuts aren’t likely to be popular in France, where Sanofi ran into trouble with its own restructuring. Nor are the company’s comments about its R&D operations in the country, which it called “insufficiently productive.” That, too, echoes Sanofi, whose now-former CEO Chris Viehbacher cited the same reason for his French job-cutting plans in R&D.
 
Pierre Fabre is far from the only drugmaker cutting jobs and paring away lackluster businesses–not to mention scaling back in France. Novartis just cut 200 people from its New Jersey payroll in a sales-force shift, and it’s cutting other jobs around the world as it consolidates back-office operations. The Swiss drugmaker is also in the midst of a wholesale strategic shift, selling its animal health business to Eli Lilly and swapping its vaccine business to GlaxoSmithKline for GSK’s oncology operations. GSK announced job cuts last week as well.
 
Bristol-Myers Squibb also said last week it would hack 1,000 from its Chinese payroll. And Merck is cutting costs–as well as jobs–as it narrows its focus; the U.S.-based drugmaker recently sold its consumer business to Bayer.
 
By Tracy Staton
 

comments closed

Related News

May 4, 2024

Novartis acquires Mariana in $1.75bn deal to strengthen radioligand portfolio

Life sciences

Novartis will acquire Mariana’s lead candidate MC-339, a radioligand therapy (RLT) designed to target small-cell lung cancer. Last year, Mariana had raised $175m in a Series B round from several funds and pharma giant Eli Lilly.

May 4, 2024

Novo Nordisk aims for market domination, boasts $1.5bn obesity sales in Q1

Life sciences

The company’s aspiration to expand the use of its obesity products to cardiovascular indications has been successful. In March, its blockbuster drug Wegovy was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for reducing the risk of cardiovascular diseases in obese or overweight adults.

May 4, 2024

Ono Pharmaceutical acquires cancer-focused biopharma Deciphera for $2.4bn

Life sciences

Massachusetts-based Deciphera brings to the table an extensive kinase inhibitor pipeline, kinase drug discovery expertise, and a strong commercial and sales platform in the US and European markets that is meant to advance Ono’s capabilities and presence in the oncology space.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach