
"What are we on?" you're asking. How can Merck's acquisition of Schering-Plough stand a chance of winning a Big Pharma Roger, when it's up against Pfizer/Wyeth? At $41 billion or so, the Merck deal was considerably smaller than Pfi/Wy, and it wasn't transformative in the way Pfi/Wy is supposed to be (new kind of pharma 'n all that).
Still, we all know size isn't everything, and that details count. Merck might've only been buying time through this deal--time to figure out what on Earth to do about a $4 billion patent-expiry problem--and will be doing the usual, un-prize-worthy cost-slashing (the deal's synergies represent a whopping 40% of sales). But what it lacks in headliners it makes up for, we argue, in behind-the-scenes cleverness.

Yet Schering brings valuable assets to Merck: a marketed portfolio that fits nicely into Merck's current organization, and an R&D palette in the same therapeutic areas but with very little mechanism-of-action overlap. Cheap diversification, then, to create a much more impressive combined pipeline, but within comfortable boundaries.
The second clever bit was the deal's structure, designed to minimize the chance that Johnson & Johnson comes in to spoil the party. Per the companies' 1998 agreement granting Schering ex-US rights to anti-TNF drugs Remicade (and follow-on Simponi), J&J has a change of control clause allowing it to scoop back those rights in the event that Schering-Plough is taken over. (The two drugs in question are potentially worth up to $8 billion together.)
But technically Schering-Plough isn't being taken over: the deal is a reverse-merger in which Schering is the surviving entity--renamed as Merck. And run by Merck's CEO Dick Clark out of Whitehouse Station, N.J. Crafty, eh?
Now okay, J&J has sought arbitration. So that crafty bit may not work out. (And indeed, management at the time of the merger provided guidance both with and without the anti-TNFs.) But good for them, we say, for trying.
Vote for the shrewd under-dog deal, then; the one that appears run-of-the-mill but which may be the smartest, at least in the short-to-mid-term, by going for certainties and not betting on entirely new models. Vote here for the deal that in fact isn't simple or risk-free but which takes a gamble--yet not a crazy, potentially fatal gamble. Vote here for the deal that lets Merck wait and see for a while before committing to anything radical.
(As for what happens when the bought time runs out...well, watch out for DOTY 2012 or thereabouts.)
HILARIOUS!
ReplyDelete[Even if unintended -- as ironic content -- this is hilarious!]
Thanks.
Namaste