Gilead to Buy Kite Pharma for Roughly $11 Billion in Cash
28 Agosto 2017 - 12:59PM
Dow Jones News
By Jonathan D. Rockoff
Gilead Sciences Inc. has agreed to pay about $11 billion for
Kite Pharma Inc. and its promising new technology for harnessing
the body's immune system to fight cancer, according to people
familiar with the matter.
Gilead will pay $180 a share, the people said, representing a
29% premium over Kite's closing price Friday. The all-cash deal, to
be announced Monday, would give Gilead a foothold in a new type of
personalized treatment that doctors say could save patients with
the most dire cases of cancer and analysts estimate would ring up
billions of dollars in sales.
Gilead, of Foster City, Calif., had been looking for an
acquisition to diversify its portfolio beyond its leading position
in infectious-disease treatments and provide a new revenue stream
as sales of the company's hepatitis C drugs decline.
The deal for Kite would be one of Gilead's biggest, rivaling the
company's $11 billion purchase of liver-disease drugmaker
Pharmasset in 2012. Through that acquisition, Gilead gained
hepatitis C therapies that are among the world's top-selling
drugs.
Now Gilead is betting that Kite can provide a similar payoff.
Kite, of Santa Monica, Calif., is a leader among several companies
that aim to use genetic engineering to weaponize a patient's own
immune T cells and then deploy them to attack lymphoma and other
blood cancers.
Kite's main drug, known as axi-cel, is up for approval in the
U.S. and Europe. Analysts predict it would have world-wide sales of
$1.7 billion in 2022, according to EvaluatePharma, which ranks the
drug among the industry's top 10 compounds in terms of sales
potential. Such expectations have already pushed the company's
shares sharply higher this year.
Axi-cel is likely to face swift, steep competition. Novartis AG,
one of the leading cancer-drug makers, beat Kite to be the first
company to ask the Food and Drug Administration to approve a
bioengineered T-cell drug. Several other companies are developing
the drugs too.
Gilead made its name selling treatments for HIV/AIDS. The
biotech company surged in value after launching the hepatitis C
treatments developed at Pharmasset. The drugs, Sovaldi and Harvoni,
helped Gilead double its sales in 2014. It now has a market value
of roughly $100 billion.
Last year Gilead had $30 billion in sales, including $9.1
billion from Harvoni and $4 billion from Sovaldi.
Yet the anti-viral drugs' commercial success has also proved to
be an albatross. Gilead faced public criticism and a Senate
investigation for listing Sovaldi at $1,000 a day, even though the
therapy cured most patients at a cost of less than a liver
transplant.
The hepatitis C drugs' sales were squeezed in recent years when
Merck & Co. launched a rival treatment, forcing Gilead to offer
steep discounts to health plans. And partly because of the drugs'
success curing the disease, fewer patients needed treatment.
The company's second-quarter hepatitis C drug sales fell to $2.9
billion world-wide, down from $4 billion during the period a year
earlier.
Gilead has faced pressure from investors and analysts to find
new revenue sources. Management responded by touting its next
generation of HIV/AIDS treatments as well as drugs in development
to treat a liver disease known as NASH, for nonalcoholic
steatohepatitis.
But Wall Street said Gilead needed to do another deal. Gilead
fanned speculation by hiring Alessandro Riva from Novartis to run
its hematology and oncology division, as well as its former
adviser, investment banker Andrew Dickinson, from Lazard.
After years of surging volume, pharmaceutical deal making has
been slow this year, with very few megamergers aside from Johnson
& Johnson's r oughly $30 billion deal to buy Actelion Ltd. Drug
companies have been digesting earlier acquisitions and have also
been hampered by uncertainty surrounding tax reform because many of
them have large amounts of cash overseas.
The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter, around the
same time as the deadline for U.S. approval of Kite's main drug,
according to the people familiar with the matter.
--Dana Mattioli contributed to this article.
Write to Jonathan D. Rockoff at Jonathan.Rockoff@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 28, 2017 06:44 ET (10:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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