Takeover Flurry Attests to Battle in Medical-Products Industry: Spotlight
Bloomberg News August 16, 1998, 12:26 p.m. ET
Takeover Flurry Attests Battle in Medical Products: Spotlight
Zurich, Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The second multibillion- dollar medical-technology acquisition in three weeks, Stryker Corp.'s $1.9 billion purchase of Howmedica from Pfizer Inc. proved Friday that the battle for market share is escalating in the $9 billion orthopedic-products market.
The normally sedate industry, dominated by Johnson & Johnson and rivals Smith & Nephew Plc, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.'s Zimmer, Howmedica and others, was jolted July 21 when Roche Holding AG said it would sell DePuy to Johnson & Johnson for $3.5 billion. Analysts said at the time the move would prompt others to shed medical-products units. Pfizer, the maker of blockbuster antidepressant Zoloft, soon proved them right.
When Johnson & Johnson bought DePuy, the world's fifth- biggest maker of artificial joints, the price was the biggest surprise: a rich four times sales in an industry that typically produces no more than single-digit rates of growth. While Stryker is buying Howmedica for a less dramatic 2.3 times 1997 sales, that's still more than medical products makers were fetching until recently.
''DePuy will trigger a revaluation of other medical- supplies companies,'' said Beat Buob, who manages 650 million Swiss francs ($429 million) in shares at Julius Baer Asset Management in Zurich.
Companies valued on such high sales multiples are usually to be found in the faster-growing drug sector. Like real estate brokers rushing to raise house prices when adjacent homes are sold for unexpectedly high prices, analysts quickly raised their valuations of similar companies.
Customers Want Discounts
Orthopedic-products companies, analysts say, are caught in the same squeeze that forced dozens of drug companies into a merger and acquisition craze beginning late last decade. Investors are demanding higher growth rates to justify high valuations, while ever-larger customers like hospitals are demanding heavy price cuts in return for sales contracts.
Many predict the result will be a spate of corporate marriages in the industry that makes products ranging from artificial hips and knees, wound treatment devices and equipment for minimally invasive, or ''keyhole,'' surgery.
For companies big enough to prosper, the attraction of the market is that aging populations in developed countries are expected to ensure increasing demand.
''The consolidation is only at the beginning,'' said Michael King, an analyst at SG Securities in London. ''You'll see more pressure from hospitals and surgeons for one-stop- shopping, and you have drugmakers that want to get out of the business.''
Even before last week's sale, Pfizer, the U.S.'s second- largest drugmaker behind Merck & Co., already agreed to sell two medical-products units. In July, it said it would sell its American Medical Systems unit, which makes devices to treat incontinence, for $130 million to E.M. Warburg, Pincus & Co. A month earlier it agreed to sell its Swiss-based Schneider Worldwide division to Boston Scientific Corp. for $2.1 billion.
Spinoffs
Drugmakers including Eli Lilly & Co. began spinning off their medical-devices businesses in 1994, but the Johnson & Johnson purchase price changed the landscape because it offered much more than anyone paid for an orthopedics maker.
When American Home Products Corp. sold its medical-supplies unit Sherwood-Davis & Geck last March, for instance, Tyco International Ltd. paid $1.77 billion cash for the unit that generates sales of about $1 billion a year. It sells catheters and other products.
With Stryker's purchase of Howmedica nearly doubling its size, the Kalamazoo, Michigan-based company will become one of the world's biggest makers of devices to repair injured joints and bones. The company, already the world's fifth-biggest maker of orthopedic implants, said it will have a 15 percent share of the global orthopedic market with Howmedica.
''They will be an 800-pound gorilla,'' said Robert Faulkner, an analyst at Hambrecht & Quist. ''They will have secured their future in the orthopedics industry.'' Faulkner has a ''buy'' rating on Stryker's shares, though he said there is a degree of risk in the acquisition because it will be expensive to integrate Howmedica.
U.K. medical-products maker Smith & Nephew Plc may be the next to make the news.
Merger Candidate
Analysts have tipped the London-based company as a potential merger candidate after it faced serious setbacks with a promising artificial skin that it is developing with San Diego- based Advanced Tissue Sciences Inc., analysts said. Dermagraft, which some analysts said could generate $500 million in annual sales by 2004, was rejected in June by. U.S. regulators, who said more testing was needed. Now London-based Smith & Nephew probably won't have the product on the market until 2000.
The DePuy sale price prompted SG Securities analyst Alyson Coates to raise her rating on Smith & Nephew to ''hold'' from ''weak hold'' while analyst Steven Abbott at Credit Lyonnais Securities raised his rating to ''hold'' from ''sell.''
''What we are really seeing is the start of a major consolidation in this industry,'' said Coates.
Chris O'Donnell, Smith & Nephew chief executive, said while the Johnson & Johnson move ''sent shockwaves through the industry,'' he said the company isn't worried about being a takeover candidate. ''Any company is at risk of being taken over, but we think it's unlikely we will be.''
Acquisition Opportunities
O'Donnell said the shakeout is likely to lead to acquisition opportunities. ''We have been saying for a while we think consolidation is likely to occur,'' said O'Donnell. ''I think that is going to shake some fruit off the trees.''
Bill Blair, an analyst at Robert Fleming Securities, said Smith & Nephew should try to expand to build market share to offset sluggish growth.
''To get some impetus behind this stock, they need to make a fairly significant acquisition in a growth area,'' said Blair. ''The basic problem is that the markets they operate in are highly competitive with little scope for technological breakthroughs.''
If Smith & Nephew is on the lookout for acquisitions, it may find itself competing with Switzerland's Sulzer Medica AG, which engineering company Sulzer AG listed as a separate entity last year to allow it to focus more on the medical-devices business. Pfizer, questioned before it announced its agreement with Stryker last week, said Sulzer Medica was also considered to be a contender to buy the Howmedica unit.
Units Up for Sale
Sulzer Medica continues to refine its own product range. As it concentrates on orthopedics and cardiovascular prosthetic products, it is trying to sell Intermedics, its struggling pacemaker unit, and Osypka, a unit making catheters. Together the two units account for one-third of Sulzer Medica's sales.
Drug companies, which in the 1980s bought into the medical- supplies market to broaden their reach and benefit from high growth, are mostly moving out of the area to focus on their most profitable business of selling drugs. Margins in orthopedic products are shrinking amid government-imposed health cost cuts. The ones who keep their businesses such as Johnson & Johnson have to invest billions of dollars to buy market share and extend their product ranges.
''Roche realized that it would have to make further acquisitions to make DePuy a core business,'' said Plinio Zanetti, a fund manager and analyst at Bank Leu AG.
While DePuy has a leading market share in spinal implants - - it lags only Sofamor Danek Group Inc. of the U.S. in sales -- Roche would have had to make further purchases to increase Warsaw, Indiana-based DePuy's sales of trauma devices, for example, in which it has a market share of only 5 percent. Trauma devices include plates and screws to reassemble bones.
--Reto Gregori in the Zurich newsroom (411) 224 4111 and Dane
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