Merck's pipeline of late stage drugs has grown to 18, thanks to its acquisition of Schering-Plough. Further, combined revenue between the two companies in 2008 was $47B, which is roughly double that of Merck alone. The acquisition price is steep, but it will ultimately be a good investment.
Merck & Co. Inc. (MRK) today (Monday) agreed to pay $41.1 billion in stock and cash for Schering-Plough Corp. (SGP), forming the world’s second-largest prescription drugmaker.
It’s the second mega-deal for Big Pharma this year, as Pfizer Inc. (PFE) made a $68 billion offer for Wyeth (WYE) in late January. Large pharmaceutical companies have been bucking a slide in M&A activity that has been exceptionally quiet.
“It clearly is a year of mergers for pharmaceutical companies,” Philippe Lanone, an analyst at Natixis Securities in Paris, told Bloomberg News in a telephone interview. “They don’t have much of a choice if they are to guarantee EPS growth in the years to come.”
The pharmaceutical industry is consolidating now that many of the blockbuster drugs of the 1990s are losing patent protection, negatively affecting sales. And the situation has been made worse by a lack of replacements in the research and development pipeline at big drug companies.
Unlike many of Merck’s current drugs, Schering-Plough has blockbuster drugs that won’t face generic competition for several years. The deal doubles the number of drugs Merck has in late stage development to 18, Chief Executive Officer Richard Clark, said in a conference call with analysts.
For its part, Schering-Plough has been firing workers and closing factories trying to save $1.25 billion as it battles concerns over falling cholesterol drug sales. Schering’s stock price spiraled down 36% in 2008.
While the deal may make sense for both companies, some analysts are questioning the price.
Holders will receive 0.5767 Merck shares and $10.50 in cash for each share of Schering-Plough, making the deal worth $23.61 a share, a 34% premium to the stock’s Friday closing price.
“The price seems way too low. It’s a tremendous deal for Merck. I think it should be at least $12 billion to $15 billion higher,” said Moskowitz, noting that Schering-Plough’s overseas rights to arthritis drugs Remicade and Golimumab were worth at least that much.