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Chiron to Use Deal Proceeds to Acquire Drugs in Late Stages of Development
By RALPH T. KING JR. Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Chiron Corp. said it plans to use proceeds from the $1.1 billion sale of its diagnostics business to Bayer AG Thursday to buy something it has long lacked: promising, late-stage drugs.
The sale is timely since it gives the nation's second-largest biotechnology company a war chest to purchase other biotech companies, or the fruits of their research, at a time when the industry is out of favor with investors. But Chiron, which will sacrifice about half its $1.1 billion revenue base in the deal, may be bidding against pharmaceutical companies with rich stock prices and cash hordes of their own.
The transaction is the first major step by Chiron's newly appointed chief executive officer, Sean Lance, to refocus the company after years of poor performance from clinical-trial failures, product delays and ill-conceived expansion. Mr. Lance said he will shop for cancer and cardiovascular drugs that Chiron can bring to market within 18 months and wouldn't rule out a hostile takeover of a biotech company, if need be.
Mr. Lance, a drug-industry veteran who is a native of South Africa, said he believed in spending "more money on later stages of product development." He plans to announce further changes in strategy within a month, which might include selling Chiron's vaccine business, he said.
"This is a guy who is bearing down and a company that is finally on the move, focusing on its own internal strengths," said Michael Sheffrey, a biotech analyst with OrbiMed Advisors in New York.
Looking for 'Product Bargains'
But several analysts questioned the approach of buying cheap yet attractive drugs as a way to help reverse Chiron's fortunes. "Everyone is out there looking for advanced-stage product bargains," said Matthew Geller, an analyst with CIBC Oppenheimer, adding that it could take at least five years to turn Chiron around. "This company is paying for past sins, and repentance comes at a high price in biotech," Mr. Geller said.
In Nasdaq Stock Market trading Thursday, Chiron's stock closed at $17.4375, up 56.25 cents but significantly below the $29 per share, or $2.1 billion, price Novartis AG paid for nearly half the company in 1994.
One big question facing Chiron, Emeryville, Calif., is how its strategic moves will be viewed by Novartis. The Swiss drug giant has the right to increase its stake to 55% in January 2000 but for now is subject to a standstill agreement. In the past Novartis executives have said they are pleased with Chiron, but analysts say they have privately expressed frustration with the company's progress.
Mr. Lance said he hopes to persuade Novartis to invest more in Chiron. "We want them to increase their holding because they believe in us, but we also want to keep our autonomy," he said.
Royalties on Applications
The sale of the diagnostics division to Bayer should be final by the end of the year, Chiron said. Chiron will also collect royalties from the German pharmaceutical company on diagnostic applications related to hepatitis C and HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
Craig Parker, an analyst with Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette, cheered the price and speed of the sale and said he is now considering upgrading Chiron's stock to a buy. "With someone like Sean Lance, changes could take place quite rapidly, maybe not in the company's culture but in its income statement."
Chiron has traditionally resembled an academic laboratory, reflecting the style of its chairman, William Rutter. Dr. Rutter guided a string of innovations as a biochemistry professor at the University of California at San Francisco in the 1970s but proved less successful as a manager of a large corporation. He funded too many basic-research projects at once, didn't focus on commercial issues like manufacturing, and tended to micromanage senior executives, analysts say.
But since Mr. Lance joined Chiron last May, Dr. Rutter has remained largely on the sidelines. In a symbolic gesture, he surrendered his corner office to Mr. Lance and moved into the office occupied by Mr. Lance's predecessor, Edward Penhoet. Dr. Penhoet, who had announced intentions to stay at Chiron to manage relations with regulators and research collaborators, resigned in July to become dean of the School of Public Health at the University of California at Berkeley. |