
While BMS purges non-biopharma assets, others are diversifying at breakneck pace. Just yesterday Sanofi-Aventis said it would spend $1.9 billion to make a splash in the US OTC products market, for example.
Meanwhile BMS was busy trading shares of its nutritionals unit, Mead Johnson, for its own shares in a spin-off of the division. Bristol won't receive cash for the deal, but the transaction will be accretive to earnings in 2010 by reducing the number of Bristol's shares outstanding, thus increasing earnings per share. The exchange offer will also be attractive to shareholders because it is expected to be tax free.

But Bristol reckoned that those 170 million remaining Mead Johnson shares, if all exchanged, would give it a ten-cent pop in EPS next year. Plus with all those shares retired, the company will improve its cash flow by paying out $350 million less in dividends (er, that's provided it doesn't raise its dividend on the remaining shares, and without subtracting the smaller dividend it got from its MJN holdings). What's more, MJN shares are way up since the IPO, so why not take advantage of that valuation bump?
Essentially, the move prioritizes short-term gain over long-term stability. Proponents of the deal say that's OK, because without some sort of short-term gain to appease investors, BMS might not have a medium- or long-term future in which to let it's string-of-pearls strategy play out.
The bottom line is that BMS needs to keep its rivals at bay by maintaining or boosting its worth in the face of two massive patent expirations (Avapro and Plavix) to make sure nobody can buy them on the cheap. That means good growth from existing and in-line products and potentially spending its $10 billion cash pile on a few more near-market pearls.
That's no easy task, but its two-part parting of the ways with Mead Johnson is a creative and lucrative pair of transactions that puts it in the best position to succeed.
image by flickr user nerissa's ring used under a creative commons license
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