
But there's a conundrum floating around Big Pharma halls these days that makes the move by Abbott seem pretty strategic, DOTY-worthy even. That is: how to spend the billions of dollars held outside the US before the Obama administration decides to crack down on a tax deferral for multinationals.
All in all, the buyout follows a pretty straightforward plot line, but the clincher to the story is this: Abbott is buying the Belgian drug unit with cash, most of which is coming from overseas.

Abbott's decision to buy Solvay isn't just about spending ex-US cash though. The drug maker also adds more than $3 billion to its top line and gains full control over the blockbuster TriCor/TriLipix dyslipidemia franchise, a business Abbott has big plans for. The company is developing Certriad, a fixed-dose combination of TriLipix and the statin Crestor, under a partnership with AstraZeneca. The addition of Solvay's drug unit also extends Abbott's geographic footprint, adds a branded generics business and provides entry into vaccines. (Ooh, diversification.)
Management didn't have much trouble selling the deal to investors, given the short-term gains. But the acquisition does little to address the holes in Abbott's pipeline. The major drugs in development at Solvay are pardopronox in Phase III development for Parkinson's disease, Duodopa, an L-dopa suspension system for advanced stage Parkinson's disease and gabapentin GR, an extended-release form of gabapentin (Pfizer's Neurontin and generics) for neuropathic pain and post-herpetic neuralgia.
How the buyout will play out over the long-term remains to be seen. But Abbott chief executive Miles White has impressed us before. Abbott's $3.7 billion buyout of Kos in 2006 added Niaspan and Simcor just before Pfizer's next-big-thing torcetrapib blew up, and with the $6.9 billion acquisition of Knoll in 2001, Abbott gained Humira, a drug that today generates more than $4 billion a year. Now that's what we call foresight.
DOTY isn't a Lifetime Achievement Award. But maybe it is time to stop doubting.
image by flickr user GazH used under a creative commons license.
Good work on blog, how do you think deal will pan out for employees of Solvay?
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