
More like the opposite.
But you should think about this deal anyway. Trust us. In fact, trust is the point here.

Indeed, the circumstances of the case (Pfizer has the deepest pockets in the industry, it is in essence a repeat offender, and the allegations involved the now notorious Cox-2 inhibitor class) coupled with the retirement of Acting US Attorney Michael Loucks may mean it is a record that is never broken.
$2.3 billion is a lot of money. Okay, it is not $68 billion, the price tag on Pfizer’s purchase of Wyeth, a deal we expect will get more votes than this one in the DOTY competition. But, it is enough to pay a $.30 cent per share one-time dividend—more than enough to offset the dividend cut Pfizer announced in the context of the Wyeth transaction. Oh, right, and Pfizer announced something else the day it announced the Wyeth deal: the tentative settlement with the US Attorney in Massachusetts.
So this deal does have something to do with business development after all.
But these settlements have always been more important than the dollars. Each case—and the headlines it generates—marks another step down in the reputation of the industry. They have helped stoke a puritanical fire in the medical establishment, one that aims to root out all industry influence over clinical research, medical education, and clinical practice standards, a movement that could, taken to extremes, jeopardize the entire private sector biomedical model.
It is hard to put a price tag on a loss of trust. But there is a cost. It shows up when juries award damages in product liability suits. Or when legislators say $80 billion isn’t enough of a contribution to health care reform. Or—most importantly and hardest to measure—when patients stop taking their medicine in response to a negative headline. Because, after all, every time someone takes a prescription drug, it is an act of trust.
Pfizer seems to have gotten the message. At least, CEO Jeff Kindler is telling anyone and everyone that he has, during a kind of post-Wyeth integration mea culpa tour. So the CEO of Pfizer clearly agrees with us that reputation counts.
But here's the thing about trust. Once it is lost, it is hard to earn back. If you don't believe us, check out this New York Times take-down of the estrogen replacement therapy market, which basically says that Wyeth's entire franchise in that category is the result of a decades long, um, fraud.
See, in an era defined by loss of trust, buying new companies only buys new headaches. Wyeth's HRT franchise is Pfizer's now. Kindler has more work to do.
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