Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Thursday, Jun 12, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version | Audio


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Pharmaceuticals
Corporate - Mergers & Acquisitions
Get Latest Quote and Company Info
Ranbaxy to serve Japanese generic ambitions

New entity will have global reach in proprietary and generic products


Kumar Shankar Roy
Advertisement

BL Research Bureau The Singh family’s exit as the promoters of Ranbaxy Laboratories, India’s largest pharmaceutical company by turnover, will help the new owner Daiichi Sankyo Company to realise its generic ambitions in the US, Japan and emerging markets.

The Indian pharmaceutical market, where growth is at best modest, seems unlikely to have been a chief reason for the Japanese firm’s decision to buy Ranbaxy.

The Ranbaxy-Daiichi deal is perhaps the first instance of an innovator company combining with a generic company to form a global pharma giant. The entity will have an extensive global reach in both proprietary as well as generic products, and a similar position of strength in mature and emerging markets.

Generic game

Daiichi Sankyo was established in 2005 after the merger of two leading century-old Japanese pharmaceutical companies. For the Japanese drug making company, the Ranbaxy buy brings in a strong generic business. It can leverage the Indian company’s manufacturing capabilities to sell products in the Japanese market, potentially one of the biggest markets expected to open up for generics, globally. Around 90 per cent of Ranbaxy’s revenues are from sales of generic drugs.

The Government of Japan is encouraging generic substitution, reflected in the growing volume of such drugs; generic medicines are estimated to account for 30 per cent of the total medicine market in Japan by 2012. It was estimated to be around 17 per cent in 2007. To ready themselves quickly for this, Japanese drugmakers, traditionally only into making new drugs, have been compelled to acquire additional capabilities and also expand their international presence.

Deal details

At the market value of Rs 36,550 crore, Daiichi Sankyo has valued Ranbaxy at 5.51 times its trailing twelve months sales of over Rs 6,600 crore.

This is at a mid-point of valuations commanded by other large-cap generic companies such as Sun Pharmaceutical Industries (8.63 times), Cipla (3.6 times) and Dr Reddys Laboratories (2.38 times).

Ranbaxy is expected to sharply ramp up its revenues and profits in the years to 2014, due to robust growth in the US business and the potential one-time upsides in US related to generic launches of Imitrex, Valtrex, Flomax, Lipitor, Diovan and Nexium. The price appears to factor this in.

Existing investors

For Ranbaxy investors, who can now look forward to an open offer at Rs737 possibly in July-August, there are certain aspects of the deal which should be of interest.

First, near term earnings could see dilution on account of equity expansion of about 30 per cent due to the proposed preferential allotment of warrants and shares, as well as expected conversion of previously issued foreign currency convertible bonds into equity . However, some savings may come in when Ranbaxy retires significant portion of its debt, as indicated.

Second, the deal has put a halt to Ranbaxy’s original plans of demerging its New Drug Discovery Research unit, named Ranbaxy Life Science Research, and the margin-accretive benefits supposed to have flowed to Ranbaxy. As per the de-merger scheme, shareholders were to get one share of the new entity for every four shares held by them in Ranbaxy.

Lastly, it would have to be seen how Ranbaxy will be able to gain from Daiichi’s pipeline of products after it becomes a subsidiary.

Related Stories:
Ranbaxy gets mixed verdict on Pfizer’s Lipitor in Australia
Ranbaxy first quarter net rises 7.2% at Rs 153 cr
Ranbaxy R&D spin-off

More Stories on : Pharmaceuticals | Mergers & Acquisitions | Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Hiring

Stories in this Section
Monsoon hits Nagpur even as systems weaken


Farmers likely to feel the pinch of di-ammonium phosphate shortage
High global prices spoil fertiliser party
Panel to help combat aviation fuel price rise
Daiichi Sankyo to buy 51% in Ranbaxy at Rs 737/share
‘This sale is for strategic growth’
Ranbaxy stake sale — When predator turned prey
Ranbaxy to serve Japanese generic ambitions
‘We want to be number one player in Japan’
Premium for Ranbaxy buy among the highest
Essar hikes offer for Esmark to $19 a share
Sponge iron unit sale positive for Grasim
PSL: Buoyant order flows spell strong revenue visibility
Crompton Greaves (Rs 251.55): Buy
Ranbaxy: ‘Bought on rumour and sold on news’
Day Trading Guide
Banks begin to rejig investment portfolios
Repo rate hike: Analysts expect market to open weak today
US Bill seeks to ease green card restrictions
RBI hikes repo rate to 8%
Valuing art: The role of provenance and auction
‘IPL franchisees may have better margins than Arsenal, Man U’


Brandline



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line