Schering CEO Warns Of Loss Of Innovation In Drug Cos' Deals
October 06 2009 - 2:17PM
Dow Jones News
A cash crunch among smaller drug developers has created more
buying opportunities for large pharmaceutical companies, but
Schering-Plough Corp.'s (SGP) leader says that's not always good
for medical innovation.
Schering-Plough Chief Executive Fred Hassan, who has agreed to
sell his company to Merck & Co. (MRK), says valuations for
smaller drug developers have plunged by at least 50% over the past
12 months.
These companies' experimental drugs in mid-stage development,
which might have fetched $100 million in a sale or license deal a
year ago, are now worth "half of that or less," Hassan said at a
conference on medical innovation Tuesday at the Cleveland
Clinic.
While the crunch has created buying opportunities for Big
Pharma, the plunging values have dashed the hopes of many
entrepreneurs who fuel innovation, Hassan said.
Previously, many of these companies would have looked to initial
public stock offerings for funding. But IPOs have dried up, and
smaller companies are running out of cash, pushing them into the
arms of Big Pharma.
Hassan said that's not necessarily ideal because "the innovation
power starts to go down when one of these companies becomes a part
of Big Pharma."
Separately, Hassan called on the U.S. government to provide
increased funding for the National Institutes of Health to help
advance cancer treatment. He said the NIH, which funds research in
cancer and other diseases, should get a "few more billion dollars"
annually dedicated to research on the biology of cancer.
"We need to crack the code," he said.
Hassan also said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration should
develop more flexible regulatory pathways for new cancer drugs to
be approved, so that such drug development becomes more "attractive
of capital."
-Peter Loftus; Dow Jones Newswires; 215-656-8289;
peter.loftus@dowjones.com