Glaxo Wellcome Can't Shake Major-Merger Speculation: Spotlight
Bloomberg News August 9, 1998, 11:53 a.m. ET
Glaxo Wellcome Can't Shake Major-Merger Speculation: Spotlight
London, Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Glaxo Wellcome Plc, the world's second-biggest drugmaker, is determined never to return to the days when blockbuster ulcer treatment Zantac generated nearly half its sales and a majority of profit.
Robert Ingram, the 55-year-old chief executive, doesn't hesitate when asked where Glaxo, which failed earlier this year in its effort to merge with rival SmithKline Beecham Plc, would like to bolster the range of drugs it sells.
''The market we really are not in is cardiovascular,'' he said, pointing to an area dominated by Merck & Co. and Warner- Lambert Co. of the U.S. and Zeneca Group Plc of the U.K.
While Ingram didn't say how Glaxo plans to expand into the $36 billion market for drugs that treat high blood pressure and other cardiovascular diseases, he and other executives say one route is to buy or merge with a rival established in the field. ''If others do, we will,'' said Finance Director John Coombe.
Such statements, repeated often last week when Glaxo posted better-than-expected first-half earnings, raised speculation that Glaxo is actively looking to dramatically build its share of the world's $244 billion drug market, where no one company holds more than a 5 percent share.
While Glaxo is building sales with new drugs to treat AIDS, central nervous system disorders and respiratory disease, thus replacing its previous reliance on Zantac, its failed approach to SmithKline in February reinforced the view that Glaxo may lead a new round of industry consolidation.
'Open to Idea'
''I would not be at all surprised if Glaxo were to make a move,'' said Paul Diggle, an analyst with SG Securities. ''They have clearly stated they are open to the idea.''
Diggle and other analysts compare the evolution of the drug industry to that of computers or automobiles, where falling trade barriers and stiff global competition forced dozens of companies to merge into a handful. Five carmakers, for instance, control half the world's market.
The consolidation that created major companies like Glaxo Wellcome, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., SmithKline Beecham, Hoechst AG's Hoechst Marion Roussel unit and Novartis AG in the last decade has slowed in the last year. Analysts attribute that to higher prices for drugs in the U.S., the world's largest and most profitable market. Roche Holding AG's $10.2 billion takeover of Corange Ltd., which included the diagnostics company Boehringer Mannheim GmbH, was the industry's biggest transaction last year.
However, a squeeze in the U.S. market could trigger another round of mergers, analysts say. An expanded portfolio in more therapeutic areas would give Glaxo better grounds to compete in the U.S. market, where it ranked fourth in 1997 sales, behind Bristol-Myers, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck.
Maybe Merck?
Some say Merck, the world's largest drugmaker by sales, would be a workable partner for Glaxo, since Merck has a strong cardiovascular drugs franchise. While Merck recently said it has no plan to seek a merger, it will by 2002 lose exclusive rights to several cardiovascular drugs, including Vasotec and Mevacor, that contributed $5.3 billion, or 22 percent, of its 1997 sales.
Merck maintains that newer cardiovascular drugs, including Cozaar, which controls high blood pressure, and Zocor, which cuts cholesterol, will fill that gap.
However, mergers are a proven way to build product lines, as Glaxo demonstrated when it bought the Wellcome Group Plc for $14.8 billion in 1995. That acquisition helped to make Glaxo the world's biggest AIDS drug maker and overcome the loss of Zantac.
James Culverwell, analyst with Merrill Lynch & Co., called Merck ''plausible candidate, but Merck appears to be showing no signs of wanting a deal.''
Others, such as Michael Ward, analyst with BT Alex. Brown, note that Merck and other face the loss of many best-selling drugs, forcing them to seek ways to broaden the product lines -- by developing their own drugs, licensing new drugs developed by other or merging with a company with attractive products.
Also Astra?
Merck isn't the only drugmaker that will lose the exclusive rights to best-selling products in the next five years. Astra AB of Sweden, which faces the loss of its patent for the ulcer drug Prilosec in 2001, said this year it would consider a merger.
Since Glaxo faces no significant patent losses before 2003, analysts say it will soon be in a strong position to negotiate a merger with those who do.
Other partners with strong cardiovascular drug franchises include Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., Pfizer Inc. and American Home Products Corp. A merger with any of them would put Glaxo close to an industry goal of 10 percent market share.
A merger with a U.K. partner would be the best option for Glaxo, analysts said, since transatlantic mergers pose problems with different accounting rules, dual share listings and other factors. After talks with SmithKline Beecham failed, Glaxo's most likely U.K. merger partner is Zeneca, which has vowed to remain independent.
Stock Listing
In recent years, there have been only two transatlantic drug industry mergers, SmithKline Beecham and Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. The principle impediment to such unions has been resolving where and how the shares are listed, said Don Meltzer, the co-head of European mergers and acquisitions for Credit Suisse First Boston.
If a merged company is based outside the U.S., as SmithKline Beecham is, it sells American depositary receipts -- certificates that represent foreign shares held in trust, usually by a bank -- to U.S. investors.
But ADRs are excluded from some stock indexes, notably the Standard & Poor's 500, which makes their shares less attractive to some investors and off-limits to others, such as index-fund managers. This makes it harder to raise capital for research.
''There are a lot of index funds and a lot of volume,'' said Meltzer. ''If you aren't part of the index, (index funds) aren't buying your stock.''
Daimler-Benz AG has proposed to resolve this problem by issuing a new type of security -- registered ordinary shares -- after it completes its takeover of Chrysler Corp. this year.
Tony Hardy, fund manager for Church Commissioners, which manages $3 billion for the Church of England, said some Glaxo shareholders may frown on transnational listings.
Hardy, whose biggest holding is in Glaxo shares, said when Philadelphia-based SmithKline Beckman Inc. merged with the Beecham Group Plc in the U.K. in 1989, shares listed in the U.K. and the U.S. often traded at different prices, a phenomenon he said was ''unhelpful'' to investors.
He added, however, that he and other shareholders would be willing to tolerate the phenomenon if it benefited the stock.
''Anything that lengthens and deepens the breadth of new products would be seen as a plus,'' he said.
--Dane Hamilton in the London newsroom (44-171) 330-7727 /gi/ms |