fiercebiotechAugust 21, 2017
Tag: Mergers and Acquisitions , Biotech deals , Financial Reports
It is known to all that biotech M&A activity has been slower in 2017, but it seems that things have been calm according to new data out from Bloomberg .
Data out from Bloomberg show just how calm things have been.
In a new report, the financial news service found that biotech deals this year "are on pace for almost half the yearly totals of the past two years," with just $11.5 billion in takeovers made thus far in 2017, half the total over the 24 months prior.
And Bloomberg adds that global biotech mergers and acquisitions "are headed for the lowest annual level in four years." In 2016 and 2015, total M&A deal volume hit more than $30 billion, and more than $25 billion in 2014. Four years ago, in 2013, deals were at the lowest ebb in recent times, at less than $10 billion.
But why the sluggish activity this year? Look no further than President Donald Trump’s promised tax reform, still to be clarified, which is seeing potential buyers hold fire, according to analysts.
It also comes as Big Pharma CEOs have repeatedly stated in their last few quarterly financials that they are seeking smaller, bolt-on deals, and see valuations for many biotechs as too high. It also comes amid a small R&D sell-off in Q2, with a number of Big Pharmas, including GlaxoSmithKline and Lilly, licensing out or changing up their pipeline in a series of reconfigurations.
Potential pricing restrictions are still a specter haunting biopharma, but the threat appears to be waning as the current administration deals with issues such as the Obamacare, immigration and reducing regulation.
As EP Vantage noted in its recent "2017 Pharma and Biotech Half-Year Review" report: "After the first half of 2017 biopharma investors are in a position to be exuberant: the threat of U.S. price controls that have overshadowed the sector for a year have largely disappeared."
It also notes that M&A deals have"disappointed". It says that"One could point to the macro issues of a lack of corporate tax reform and big pharma’s inability to use overseas cash to fund domestic transactions as holding back M&A activity.
"However, big pharma still is confronting high biotech valuations, making them reluctant to take big acquisition risks."
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