Sector News

Novartis decides not to sell Roche stake chairman tells newspaper

October 12, 2017
Life sciences

Novartis has decided not to sell its roughly $14 billion (10.61 billion pounds), 33 percent voting stake in Roche following a review, Chairman Joerg Reinhardt said in an interview published on Wednesday in Swiss newspaper HandelsZeitung.

“We said we would review whether it makes sense to sell the stake,” Reinhardt told the newspaper.

“We came to the conclusion that that’s not the case. We have made no decision to actively move ahead with the sale.”

In May 2016, Chief Executive Officer Joe Jimenez said he was ready to sell the Roche stake without demanding a premium and that Novartis has been discussing options with banks.

Novartis amassed the Roche holding, which produced $464 million in income for Novartis in 2016, under former Chairman Daniel Vasella more than a decade ago, part of unrequited advances for a merger of the Basel drug giants.

Reinhardt, who re-joined Novartis as chairman in 2013 after a stint at Germany’s Bayer, also said in the interview that sales are now recovering at the Swiss drugmaker’s troubled Alcon eye care unit.

Although Novartis has said all options are on the table for Alcon, Reinhardt said intense interest over a final decision on a review of the business is disproportionately high, especially given it now makes up little more than 10 percent of Novartis’ $48 billion annual sales.

Jimenez has suggested Alcon could be worth $25-35 billion.

Despite U.S. price pressure on generics unit Sandoz, Reinhardt said he believes synergies between its difficult-to-make generic drugs and the division’s growing portfolio of biosimilar copies of name-brand biological drugs like Roche’s Mabthera have not yet been exhausted.

“When you take that into consideration, Sandoz belongs to our core business,” Reinhardt told the newspaper.

By John Miller

Source: Reuters

comments closed

Related News

April 20, 2024

CureVac and MD Anderson Cancer Center partner to develop new cancer vaccines

Life sciences

CureVac and the University of Texas’s MD Anderson Cancer Center have announced a co-development and licensing agreement to develop novel messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)-based cancer vaccines. The strategic collaboration will focus on the development of differentiated cancer vaccine candidates in selected haematological and solid tumour indications with high unmet medical needs.

April 20, 2024

FUJIFILM plans $1.2 billion investment in major US manufacturing facility

Life sciences

FUJIFILM Corporation is planning to invest $1.2 billion to expand the planned FUJIFILM Diosynth Biotechnologies manufacturing facility in Holly Springs, North Carolina, US. This news follows the organisation’s announcement of a $2 billion investment in the facility in March 2021. This additional financial boost totals the investment to over $3.2 billion, FUJIFILM confirmed.

April 20, 2024

Sanofi cuts staff in Belgium as early-stage research dwindles

Life sciences

Sanofi’s global restructuring and downsizing is now fully underway, with layoffs stretching to the company’s Belgian offices. Belgian newspaper De Tijd reports that 67 employees have been laid off at a site in Ghent and 32 jobs are on the chopping block at Sanofi’s Belgium HQ in Diegem.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach