Pfizer in $107bn drug merger
www.afr.com.au - 16 July 2002
Pfizer,
the world's number one drug company, said on Monday it would buy rival Pharmacia
in a surprise $US60 billion ($107.4 billion) deal that would distance it from
its competitors and give it control of some of the world's most popular
pharmaceuticals.
In
what would be the biggest corporate merger in more than a year, the deal would
create a mammoth new drug firm and give Pfizer full rights to one of the
industry's most prized products: the arthritis drug Celebrex.
"This
is an extraordinary opportunity to combine two of the fastest-growing and most
innovative pharmaceutical companies and to position Pfizer for sustained
long-term leadership of the global pharmaceutical industry," said Pfizer
chairman and chief executive Hank McKinnell, who would maintain those titles in
the new company.
The
merger would create an industry behemoth with over $US48 billion in revenue and
a research and development budget of more than $US7 billion.
The
merged entity will employ about 2,000 people in Australia and own two out of the
top three drugs on the national subsidised drug scheme - cholesterol drug
Lipitor and Celebrex.
These
two drugs alone had sales last year on the pharmaceutical benefits scheme
totalling $460 million, or about 10 per cent of the PBS.