Question of price not merge?

Discussion in 'Shire' started by Anonymous, Oct 15, 2014 at 8:49 PM.

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  1. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) — Odds are AbbVie Inc. and Shire Plc will still take part in the drug industry's merger spree even if they cancel plans to combine with each other.


    Before Shire agreed to the $55 billion deal in July, analysts said the maker of fast-growing rare-disease treatments could attract other drugmakers including Allergan Inc. Should the merger with AbbVie collapse, it may open the door for Allergan, which is up against a ticking clock to come up with a defensive move for fending off hostile bidder Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. Shire could also become an acquirer, with help from the $1.6 billion breakup fee it will receive should AbbVie walk away.


    Part of North Chicago-based AbbVie's rationale for buying Shire was to be able to lower its corporate tax rate by moving its legal address abroad. Pfizer Inc. had similar plans with its pursuit of AstraZeneca Plc earlier this year. With that deal having failed and AbbVie's now in question, a merger of $175 billion Pfizer and $85 billion AbbVie is conceivable.


    “Does AbbVie have a role in consolidation in the industry if this combination doesn't happen? The answer is yes. Does Shire have a role to play? Yes,” David Amsellem, a New York-based analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos., said in a phone interview. “Shire will have a lot of options irrespective of AbbVie.”


    PHARMA FRENZY


    The pharmaceutical industry has been consolidating at a record pace, driven by American companies using deals as a way to lower their taxes while capturing new growth opportunities. Once lesser-known drugmakers, such as Valeant and Actavis Plc, have also used mergers to bulk up and join the rankings of the industry leaders.


    AbbVie, the maker of arthritis drug Humira, is on the verge of abandoning its deal with Shire after recent talks with the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service left it convinced that tax-rule changes would undermine the deal's rationale, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified discussing a private matter.


    Amsellem said he still sees the chance of an AbbVie-Shire deal getting done because there are strategic merits even if they can't get the tax benefits. AbbVie may want to lower its offer, though, and Shire might not go along with that, he said.


    “The transaction is very much alive,” Amsellem said. “It's just a question of price, if it's not an inversion.”
     

  2. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Wrong...better luck next time!