Investor Alert

New York Markets Open in:

Aug. 12, 2022, 8:06 a.m. EDT

Get ready for more merger mania in the pharma sector for the rest of the year

new
Watchlist Relevance
LEARN MORE

Want to see how this story relates to your watchlist?

Just add items to create a watchlist now:

  • X
    Pfizer Inc. (PFE)
  • X
    Amgen Inc. (AMGN)

or Cancel Already have a watchlist? Log In

Jaimy Lee

Pfizer Inc.’s /zigman2/quotes/202877789/composite PFE -1.09% $5.4 billion acquisition of Global Blood Therapeutics Inc. is the latest sign that cash-flush drug makers are ready to jump back into dealmaking.

That deal was announced just days after Amgen Inc. /zigman2/quotes/209157011/composite AMGN +2.71% said it plans to buy ChemoCentryx Inc. for $3.7 billion in cash and amid media reports that Merck & Co. Inc. /zigman2/quotes/209956077/composite MRK -0.05% is making plans to buy Seagen Inc. /zigman2/quotes/203326163/composite SGEN -0.63% for about $40 billion.

“We see strong underlying reasons to expect a big increase in deal activity. Whether or not prospective big deals like Merck’s rumored acquisition of Seagen close, we have already seen certain Big Pharma players returning to M&A in the second quarter of 2022,” Subin Baral, EY’s global life sciences deals leader, said in an email. “We anticipate that this trend will continue.”

These deals hint at an action-packed second half. Though pharmaceutical and life sciences companies spent about $61 billion on deals in the first six months of the year, pharma deal activity is down 30% on a semi-annualized basis, according to PwC . Many signs point to a changing merger-and-acquisition (M&A) landscape for the rest of this year as drug makers take steps to shore up their pipelines in advance for the generic competition that’s coming this decade.

“2022 will be a year of bolt-on transactions in the $5 [billion] to $15 billion range,” the PwC authors wrote. “However, don’t rule out the potential for larger deals ⁠— consolidation is good for the health ecosystem and drives broader efficiency.”

The SPDR S&P Pharmaceuticals exchange-traded fund /zigman2/quotes/206833245/composite XPH -0.55% has rallied 13.2% over the past three months and slipped 6.4% year to date, while the S&P 500 index /zigman2/quotes/210599714/realtime SPX -0.94% has gained 3.1% the past three months and dropped 13.7% this year.

The biggest deal so far this year is Pfizer’s $11.6 billion acquisition of Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Co. Ltd. /zigman2/quotes/239123102/composite BHVN -5.59% in cash. That deal is expected to add $6 billion in peak sales to the business. Pfizer, which has generated billions of dollars of sales of its COVID-19 antiviral and the vaccine it developed with BioNTech SE /zigman2/quotes/214419716/composite BNTX -1.65% , had about $2.4 billion in cash on hand, as of April 3, according to securities filings.

“We’re leaving very few stones unturned when we look at opportunities, and our focus is going to be consistent,” Aamir Malik, Pfizer’s chief business innovation officer, told investors on the company’s last earnings call. “It’s on scientific substrate that has the potential breakthrough for patients, deals that accelerate our top-line growth in the back half of the decade, and then opportunities where we can add substantial value, whether that’s through our scientific chops and/or our commercial capabilities.”

Analysts also expect more deals out of Amgen, with S&P Global Ratings predicting the company will spend between $2 billion and $4 billion each year. The company has about $5.2 billion in cash.

That said, there are still some big unknowns for pharmaceutical companies, including legislation that is expected to pass this week that would allow the U.S. government to negotiate drug prices (though investors may have already “priced in” the impact of the long-anticipated bill, EY’s Baral said) and a Federal Trade Commission that is paying close attention to pharmaceutical M&A.

“Access to medicine is already imperiled by untenable costs,” FTC Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter said in June, according to Biopharma Dive . “When mergers diminish competition in pharmaceutical markets, the result is higher prices.”

/zigman2/quotes/202877789/composite
US : U.S.: NYSE
$ 33.62
-0.37 -1.09%
Volume: 24.65M
Sept. 20, 2023 4:03p
P/E Ratio
8.96
Dividend Yield
4.88%
Market Cap
$191.91 billion
Rev. per Employee
$939,084
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/209157011/composite
US : U.S.: Nasdaq
$ 271.46
+7.15 +2.71%
Volume: 3.58M
Sept. 20, 2023 4:00p
P/E Ratio
18.30
Dividend Yield
3.14%
Market Cap
$145.20 billion
Rev. per Employee
$1.05M
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/209956077/composite
US : U.S.: NYSE
$ 107.31
-0.05 -0.05%
Volume: 4.59M
Sept. 20, 2023 4:03p
P/E Ratio
88.36
Dividend Yield
2.72%
Market Cap
$272.43 billion
Rev. per Employee
$831,203
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/203326163/composite
US : U.S.: Nasdaq
$ 206.99
-1.32 -0.63%
Volume: 1.73M
Sept. 20, 2023 4:00p
P/E Ratio
N/A
Dividend Yield
N/A
Market Cap
$39.10 billion
Rev. per Employee
$664,005
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/206833245/composite
US : U.S.: NYSE Arca
$ 41.44
-0.23 -0.55%
Volume: 41,113
Sept. 20, 2023 4:00p
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/210599714/realtime
US : S&P US
4,402.20
-41.75 -0.94%
Volume: 0.00
Sept. 20, 2023 5:27p
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/239123102/composite
US : U.S.: NYSE
$ 17.06
-1.01 -5.59%
Volume: 671,691
Sept. 20, 2023 4:00p
P/E Ratio
N/A
Dividend Yield
N/A
Market Cap
$1.23 billion
Rev. per Employee
N/A
loading...
/zigman2/quotes/214419716/composite
US : U.S.: Nasdaq
$ 108.61
-1.82 -1.65%
Volume: 214,365
Sept. 20, 2023 4:00p
P/E Ratio
6.10
Dividend Yield
0.00%
Market Cap
$26.48 billion
Rev. per Employee
$2.08M
loading...

This Story has 0 Comments
Be the first to comment
More News In
Industries

Story Conversation

Commenting FAQs »

Partner Center

Link to MarketWatch's Slice.