Johnson & Johnson succeeds in $30-bn tender offer for Actelion
31 Mar 2017
US healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson (J&J) today said that its $30-billion tender offer for Actelion has succeeded, and it now controls 77.2 per cent of the voting rights of the Swiss biotechnology company.
It expects the deal to close in the second quarter.
Actelion has been a target for a takeover for the past year, and J&J launched and then halted discussions with the Swiss company over disagreement on price.
French drugmaker Sanofi SA had also been interested, but was sidelined after J&J returned and began exclusive negotiations in December (See: Actelion in exclusive negotiations with J&J after talks with Sanofi)
In late November, J&J had offered to buy the whole of Actelion for about $26 billion and was reported to have raised its offer to over $27 billion, but J&J walked away from the deal after Actelion said that even the revised offer was too low.
It clinched the deal in December after once again raising its offer to $280 per share or $30 billion in cash, which included spinning off Actelion's research and development pipeline.
Actelion will spin out its research and development unit into a standalone company based and listed in Switzerland, under the name of Idorsia, and led by Actelion founder and CEO Jean-Paul Clozel.
Founded in 1997, Actelion is Europe's biggest biotech firm with 30 affiliates around the world, including the US, Canada, Brazil, Australia, Japan, Switzerland and a number of EU countries.
Run by Clozel, the company has three main units - consumer, medical devices and pharmaceuticals.
Actelion is focused on the discovery, development and commercialisation of innovative drugs for diseases with significant unmet medical needs.
Its portfolio of drugs includes Tracleer, an oral endothelin receptor antagonist, the first oral treatment approved for pulmonary arterial hypertension; Veletri, an intravenous prostacyclin, which removes the need for patients to carry ice packs; Opsumit, an oral endothelin receptor antagonist; Uptravi, the only approved oral, selective IP receptor agonist targeting the prostacyclin pathway in pulmonary arterial hypertension and Ventavis, an inhaled formulation of iloprost.
Actelion was initially financed with venture capital provided through a syndicate including Atlas Venture, Sofinnova and HealthCap.
Actelion has recently introduced two new lung medicines Opsumit and Uptravi that are poised to become blockbusters over the next three years. Both drugs are on track to reach approximately $2 billion each in peak annual sales, according to Wall Street analysts.
These two drugs will reduce dependence on Tracleer since it is expected to face generic competition in 2017. Tracleer currently rakes in nearly $1 billion or around 46 per cent of its annual sales.
The company is also counting on Opsumit and Uptravi, which combined are forecast to bring in nearly 4.5 billion francs in annual sales by 2020, according to Reuters data.