What’s behind the pharmaceutical sector’s M&A push
There are lessons for other industries in the
way pharma companies use mergers to innovate, work more efficiently, and
bolster product portfolios.
The passage of US tax
reform in late 2017 led to
speculation that merger-and-acquisition activity would soon surge among
pharmaceutical companies, due in part to tax-cut benefits accruing to sellers.
Indeed, that has come to pass: in the first half of 2018, there were 212 deals
in the sector worth more than $200 billion, up from 151 such deals in the
year-earlier period.
That is impressive
growth—but when viewed in a larger strategic context, such activity is not so
surprising. The pharmaceutical sector’s behavior is not unlike that in similarly
acquisitive industries, like telecommunications, media, and energy, where new
technologies are altering the cost of doing business and pushing companies to
continually look outside for innovation. In this context, Big Pharma’s
high-volume dealmaking becomes the norm rather than the exception. And tax
reform takes its place as just the latest in a series of market forces
(blockbuster drugs, biotechnology, and so on) that have altered the way
pharmaceutical companies have thought about and pursued dealmaking over the
past decade or more.
Over time, we and our
colleagues have studied trends in the pharmaceutical industry and considered
the questions: What are the perennial drivers of M&A in this sector, and
how might these variables change in the coming months and years? In principle,
there are three core motivations for pharmaceuticals executives to do
deals—motivations that are illustrative for companies in other sectors as well.
M&A as a source of innovation
Large pharmaceutical
companies have used M&A to bolster their innovation for a long time, and
that isn’t likely to change any time soon. Previous McKinsey research has shown
that the share of revenues coming from innovations sourced outside of Big
Pharma has grown from about 25 percent in 2001 to about 50 percent in 2016. The
development of a new drug requires high early-stage investment for what is
often a low probability of success. At the same time, late-stage trials also
require high investment and an ability to navigate complicated regulatory pathways—capabilities
that larger pharma companies typically have. These dynamics create an industry
profile in which smaller, creative companies end up funding innovation. Once
their research is more advanced, larger pharmaceutical companies enter the picture,
looking for the next “new” thing and ponying up the resources required to fund
expensive late-stage trials and large commercial marketing campaigns.
Regardless of trends, innovation in this industry is—and will
remain—fragmented.
This past year, industry
exuberance about several emerging classes of drugs prompted pharmaceutical
companies to seek out acquisition targets. The median premium for the 16
publicly traded pharmaceutical companies acquired in the first half of this
year was about 60 percent. The median premium for the six deals that took place
in the first quarter was about 90 percent. Those first six deals primarily
involved companies that have targeted immuno-oncology treatments and drugs to
combat rare diseases—two medical fields that have attracted a lot of industry
attention lately. For instance, Celgene acquired Juno at a 91 percent premium
relative to the target company’s stock price on January 16, 2018, the last day
of trading before deal rumors emerged.
More generally,
pharmaceutical companies’ portfolios and pipelines continually need refreshing
to account for inevitable declines in revenue when patents on brand-name drugs
expire and companies lose the right to manufacture and market them exclusively.
It can be challenging to accurately predict patent-expiration dates, but
consensus forecasts suggest that the total value of revenues at risk from
patent expiries over the next three years, for the top 25 pharmaceutical
companies, is roughly $85 billion.
This is a considerable
sum, but it is still less than the revenues companies lost because of patent
expirations in any average three-year period this decade. Additionally,
pharmaceutical companies rarely wait until they’ve arrived at a patent cliff
before adding to their pipelines. So, in isolation, this factor should not
result in a significant increase in dealmaking activity compared with the past
few years.
M&A to unlock synergies
Another motivation for
M&A is to capture synergies by scaling up. Takeda, for instance, acquired
Shire in May and expects to generate annual cost synergies of at least $1.4
billion three years after completion of the deal because of the companies’
complementary product portfolios and organizational structures.
Given the significant
financial and operational gains possible from consolidation, the motivation for
pursuing such deals isn’t likely to change. Indeed, to gauge the future
opportunity, we classified midsize and large pharmaceutical and biotech
companies by margins and analyzed them. The margin spread was broad:
pharmaceutical companies with annual revenues exceeding $1 billion have EBITDA margins ranging from under 20 percent to more than
50 percent, and biotech companies with annual revenues exceeding $1 billion
have EBITDA margins ranging from about 30 percent to more than 50 percent. The
results suggest that companies with high margin spreads have a tremendous
opportunity to capture synergies by acquiring subscale portfolios.
Our research did not
delve into specifics of value creation, but we did note that in the early
2000s, when overcapacity was widespread across the sector, the companies that
made the biggest deals created the most value; synergies paid for the deal
premium, and then some. More recently, however, the pharmaceutical companies
that have been more selective in their dealmaking, and those that have
supplemented even small deals with partnerships and licensing agreements have
created the most value. The premium on innovation is big, and those who place
the most bets are rewarded.
M&A to realign portfolios
Large pharmaceutical and biotechnology
companies often engage in dealmaking to realign their portfolios—whether
because their strategies have changed and they are looking to bolster their
commercial pipelines or to jettison assets acquired in past deals for which
they are no longer the best owner. In this regard, recent US tax reform may
make it more attractive for US–based pharmaceutical companies to divest noncore
assets now relative to prior years. Our colleagues have estimated that the after-tax
proceeds from a divestiture could increase by about 23 percent for a typical business, because of lower taxes on the
proceeds to the seller, as well as an increase in valuation resulting from a
decline in after-tax cash flows. We’re already seeing some large healthcare
companies carve out nonstrategic assets from their portfolios.
In pharma, as in other
industries, competition for the most compelling and innovative assets is likely
to remain fierce and spur motivations for merger deals. Strategic acquirers are
likely to continue to be aggressive about bringing in new innovations—through
early licensing and partnership agreements, for instance—as a path to continued
growth.
By Roerich Bansal, Ruth De Backer, and
Vikram Ranade
https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/whats-behind-the-pharmaceutical-sectors-m-and-a-push?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1810&hlkid=1a4ba27ef99445a7b7c079ab536778c0&hctky=1627601&hdpid=41bb6d4e-76bc-4a0d-bac4-5c67e2d62194
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