| This is from Ende at Merrill. I don't think he thinks ABGX shareholders got a great deal. 
 Company Update; Amgen Shows Confidence in P-MAb; Buys
 ABGX
 Amgen Shows Confidence in P-MAb; Buys ABGX
 Amgen showed increased confidence in panitumumab (p-MAb) for cancer &
 denosumab for osteoporosis by announcing it is acquiring Abgenix for $2.2 B in
 cash and the assumption of $450 MM of debt. The deal eliminates payments to
 ABGX for 50% of the operating profits of p-MAb and a 5% royalty on denosumab
 sales. Also, it provides a 100,000 L manufacturing plant and NOLs/tax credits,
 which will reduce future cash outlays. The deal is expected to be modestly
 dilutive in ‘06 & ’07 but accretive thereafter, increasing Amgen’s long-term
 growth.
 INCREASED CONFIDENCE IN p-MAb POTENTIAL:
 Amgen projects p-MAb sales of $2 B. Prior to pivotal data on p-MAb, Amgen
 was cautious regarding prospects of the drug. But, after getting the data, Amgen
 has shown increased confidence in p-MAb’s potential for 1st, 2nd, 3rd line and
 adjuvant colorectal cancer (CRC) as well as head & neck cancer. Based on better
 safety, more convenient dosing, a lower price, and bundling with Amgen’s other
 cancer drugs, we expect p-MAb to dominate the market vs. Erbitux.
 DEAL PRODUCES SIGNIFICANT CASH SAVINGS:
 Amgen will no longer have to pay Abgenix 50% of the worldwide operating
 profits from p-MAb nor a 5% royalty on denosumab, saving the company billions
 of dollars over the life of the drugs. In addition, Amgen will not have to build
 another manufacturing plant saving $400 MM over 4 -5 years and gains tax
 credits/NOLs of another $300 MM over 10 years.
 DILUTIVE IN NEAR-TERM BUT ACCRETIVE BY ‘08:
 Due to operating expenses from Abgenix, which will not be significantly offset by
 royalty expense savings in the near-term, we expect the acquisition to be dilutive
 by $0.09 in ‘06 and $0.05 in ’07. But, the deal should be accretive by $0.01 in
 ’08, $0.07 in ’09, and
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