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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: elmatador who wrote (26886)12/26/2007 9:07:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218047
 
on brains that do not cross borders in this age of cheap and profitless IT

get ready for the surge, as private equity impelled, hedge fund squeezed, morgan stanley enabled, and globalization compelled mncs give up their century young legacy for that last dollar in mathematically accurate but strategically flawed savings, all supremely bullish, and baked into the cake, to welcome the birth cries of teotwawki bloomberg.com

as i had mention earlier, the next quarter century of prc development will see inexpensive but highly skilled labour, cheap and plentiful capital, enhanced by inexpensive, geewhizwhoa, and plentiful formulation and commercialization of intellectual property - all the while see the enlargement of the genuine midddle class with truly growing and genuine disposable income unencumbered by wars of conquest and patch patch of empire

teotwawki winks
twoapuc beckons
ntoeawsbe says 'come hither'

QUOTE
WuXi Has More Chemists Than Pfizer as Shanghai Research Surges

By Shannon Pettypiece

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) -- WuXi Pharmatech Inc., a decade-old drug research company in the industrial outskirts of Shanghai, will employ more chemists next year than Pfizer Inc., the world's largest producer of medicines.

That's because Pfizer and rivals such as AstraZeneca Plc and Merck & Co. are turning to WuXi to help them find the next $1 billion treatment.

For the biggest pharmaceutical companies, being first with a new medicine is crucial as generic copies of their most popular brands erode sales. The shift to research labs in China is reducing expenses as U.S. and European drugmakers cut thousands of jobs. Meanwhile, WuXi is flourishing, doubling in market value in its first four months as a public company.

``The reason we exist is because the cost for research is just too high,'' said Ge Li, chief executive officer of WuXi, during an interview at the company's research center in Shanghai. ``Every company is talking about how they can't afford it.''

Outsourcing, or shifting work to contractors, may carry a risk for Western drugmakers because companies like WuXi may eventually turn into competitors.

U.S. drugmakers more than doubled their annual spending on research to $40 billion in 2004 from 1993, according to inflation-adjusted industry figures from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Applications to the Food and Drug Administration to market new drugs rose 7 percent during the same period.

The $35,000 Researcher

``You have to have your own discovery capabilities, but you also increasingly need to source externally in order to access science and innovation,'' said James Ward-Lilley, president of AstraZeneca's operations in China, in an interview in his Shanghai office.

In China, personnel and supplies can cost 60 percent less than in the U.S., according to Boston Consulting Group. A two- month primate study to test a drug's toxicity may run $20,000 there, a 10th as much as in the U.S., according to the consulting firm Ernst & Young LLP in New York.

Entry-level scientists at WuXi make $35,000 a year, while Pfizer pays equivalent workers in the U.S. more than $90,000. The lower wages mean WuXi can hire more people and get jobs done faster, Li said. It employs 2,500 scientists and chemists.

``We firmly believe this outsourcing model will fundamentally solve the current issues in the pharmaceutical industry,'' Li said. ``This model could transform the drug research and development paradigm.''

WuXi's IPO

WuXi's strategy has attracted American investors. The company, with $69.9 million in revenue last year, raised $184.6 million in an initial public offering in August in the U.S.

New York-based Pfizer announced last year it was closing its 2,400-person research lab in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as part of a plan to eliminate 10,000 jobs, or 10 percent of its workforce. London-based AstraZeneca said earlier this year it will cut 7,600 jobs. Merck & Co., based in Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, slashed employment by 6,000 since 2005.

In addition to contracting with companies like WuXi, most of the 20 largest Western drugmakers are setting up their own research centers in China, employing hundreds of scientists, Boston Consulting Group said in a report. Many of the more senior researchers received advanced degrees in the U.S.

Turning Out Scientists

The 170 Chinese scientists working at Pfizer's two-year-old research center in Shanghai analyze data from human clinical trials and prepare drug applications for U.S. regulators.

``Everything in development will be touched by our China group at some point,'' said Lingshi Tan, Pfizer's head of research in China.

AstraZeneca, the U.K.'s second-largest drugmaker, based in London, says it will open a research facility in China in 2009. A staff of more than 100 technicians will study why some cancer treatments are especially effective in Asians. The company also signed a $14 million research agreement with WuXi last year.

Novartis AG, based in Basel, Switzerland, is building a $100 million center in Shanghai that will employ 400 people by 2010.

London-based GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Europe's largest drugmaker, is moving most of its research in neurological ailments, such as Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis, to its Shanghai lab. Within 10 years about 1,000 researchers -- all with Ph.D.s -- will work in the facility, said Jingwu Zang, head of the company's Chinese research operations.

Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly & Co. said it farms out 20 percent of its chemistry research in China through a partnership with ChemExplorer Co. in Shanghai, which has 230 scientists working for Lilly.

Saving Time on Trials

Outsourcing to China also helps Western companies save money and time on human drug trials. New York-based Bristol- Myers Squibb & Co. will test every drug it develops on Chinese patients within five years, said Kabir Nath, general manager at Bristol-Myers's China headquarters in Shanghai.

AstraZeneca said it conducts more clinical trials in China than any other drugmaker, with 39 tests under way at 700 hospitals.

Recruiting patients for clinical trials takes less time in China because so many people want the free treatment, said Dennis Gillings, chairman and chief executive officer of Quintiles Transnational Corp. in Research Triangle, North Carolina, which conducts drug trials.

(Friday: Chinese `barefoot doctor' markets a gene therapy developed by Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc. and dropped by Pfizer Inc.)

To contact the reporter on this story: Shannon Pettypiece in New York at spettypiece@bloomberg.net

UNQUOTE



To: elmatador who wrote (26886)12/26/2007 9:14:46 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218047
 
the obedient tax payers best be readying their check books, to deal out cash they do not have on things they cannot afford, that does no one any good, except to aggregate the resolve of the coalition of anti-hegemon

too funny, if not so senselessly expensive news.yahoo.com

the anti-cessna system seems to be done and out, for the count

the anti-ballistic system could be as reliable, if it can actually work in the first instance

QUOTE
F-15 grounding strains U.S. air defenses By SCOTT LINDLAW, Associated Press Writer
Wed Dec 26, 4:00 PM ET


FRESNO, Calif. - The grounding of hundreds of F-15s because of dangerous structural defects is straining the nation's air defense network, forcing some states to rely on their neighbors' fighter jets for protection, and Alaska to depend on the Canadian military.

The F-15 is the sole fighter at many of the 16 or so "alert" sites around the country, where planes and pilots stand ready to take off at a moment's notice to intercept hijacked airliners, Cessnas that wander into protected airspace, and other threats.

The Air Force grounded about 450 F-15s after one of the fighters began to break apart in the air and crashed Nov. 2 in Missouri. An Air Force investigation found "possible fleet-wide airworthiness problems" because of defects in the metal rails that hold the fuselage together. It is not clear when the F-15s will be allowed to fly again.

Compounding the problem created by the grounding, another fighter jet used for homeland defense, the F-16, is in high demand for Iraq operations. And the next-generation fighter, the F-22 Raptor, is only slowly replacing the aging F-15.

Military officials say they moved quickly to patch any holes in the homeland air-defense system, and they report an increase in air defense sorties in the past month, using replacement F-16s. But they acknowledge difficulties.

"When you're filling in, obviously it's going to cause some strain," said Mike Strickler, a spokesman with North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, which is operated by the U.S. and Canada. "You're spreading resources a little thinner than we would like."

But air defenses have not been compromised, Strickler said. "We can be anywhere at any time," he said.

With the F-15s in Massachusetts out of commission, the Vermont Air National Guard is covering the whole Northeast. The Minnesota Air National Guard is manning sites in Hawaii. In Louisiana, the Illinois Air National Guard has been filling in.

And with Oregon's fighters grounded, the California Air National Guard is standing watch for the entire West Coast, an area of more than 300,000 square miles that is home to more than 46 million people in California, Oregon, Washington, and slices of Arizona and Nevada.

The California Air National Guard said this is first time in history that a single state's fighter wing is providing coverage for an entire coast.

The California Guard is keeping three alert sites — in Riverside and Fresno, Calif., and Portland, Ore. — equipped and staffed with pilots and mechanics.

"As a unit we're kind of stressed, but everyone's accepting this as a challenge and all the men and women of the unit are acting as professionally as you could ever hope for," said Col. Gary Taylor, operations group commander for the Fresno-based 144th Fighter Wing of the California Air National Guard.

The unit has had to borrow F-16s from bases in Indiana and Arizona and trim back training for certain overseas operations.

A relatively small number of F-15s — the model known as the F-15E Strike Eagle — were not found to have the structural problem, and are unaffected by the grounding.

For three weeks in November, Canadian CF-18s filled in for the F-15s over Alaska. Several times, the Canadian fighters scrambled to "do an identification" of Russian bombers flying exercises outside U.S. airspace near Alaska, said Maj. Mike Lagace, a Canadian military spokesman for NORAD.

"We flew up, met with the long-range patrol, basically let them know, `Hi, folks, we're here too,'" Lagace said. Russian warplanes have been flying exercises near Alaska and Canada with increasing frequency in recent months.

Now, a brand-new squadron of F-22s based in Alaska is standing in for the state's grounded F-15s, said Tech. Sgt. Mikal R. Canfield, a spokesman at Elmendorf Air Force Base.

As for the F-15 pilots in Portland who have been largely idled by the no-fly order, they have told the visiting California airmen they are eager to get back in the cockpit.

"They're thankful for our help," said Col. Ryan A. Orian, the 144th Fighter Wing's vice commander. "But they'd love for us to leave."

UNQUOTE