Novartis to buy US biotech The Medicines Co for US$9.7 bil

By Silke Koltrowitz, John Miller

ZURICH: Novartis AG is buying US biotechnology company The Medicines Co for about US$9.7 bil, the Swiss drugmaker said on Nov 24, as it seeks to expand its portfolio of medicines against cardiovascular disease.

The deal is expected to help shore up the company’s growth threatened by patent expirations.

Novartis is paying US$85 per share in cash, an approximately 24% premium over The Medicines Co’s closing share price of US$68.55 on Nov 22.

The company said the deal had been approved by the boards of directors of both companies and would be financed through available cash and short- and long-term borrowings.

New Jersey-based The Medicines Co’s top drug candidate is cholesterol-lowering drug inclisiran for heart patients, which could complement Novartis’ growing business with its heart-failure medicine Entresto, a slow-seller to start that has now crossed the US$1 bil annual revenue threshold.

Assuming completion in the first quarter of 2020, Novartis said it expected inclisiran to start to contribute to sales from 2021 and said it had the potential to become one of the largest products by sales in its portfolio.

The deal shows that Novartis is willing to spend billions on not only rare disease treatments, as it did in 2018 when it paid out US$8.7 bil to buy gene therapy specialist AveXis, but also for cardiovascular treatments aimed at helping potentially millions of patients.

Novartis has historically had a strong cardiovascular drug franchise, but lost ground when Diovan, once a US$6 bil-per-year seller, lost patent protection in 2012 and left the company without an immediate, innovative follow-up product.

The deal fits Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan’s aim of adding bolt-on acquisitions of up to US$10 bil to bolster the group’s portfolio of medicines with new products or technologies.

Novartis also said it expected to continue to expand core margins in the Innovative Medicines division to “mid-30s” in the near term, and to “mid- to high-30s” in the medium term. – Reuters

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