By David Benoit, Dana Mattioli and Jonathan D. Rockoff
Activist investor William Ackman and Valeant Pharmaceuticals
International Inc. on Tuesday revealed their offer to acquire
Allergan Inc., valuing the maker of the wrinkle fighter Botox at
about $46 billion.
The proposal for Allergan represents an unorthodox alliance
between an activist investor and a serial acquirer of specialty
drugs. Investors typically don't approach a potential acquirer
before investing in a target. They generally take stakes in
companies and then push for financial or operational change in a
bid to boost the company's performance and its share price.
Quebec-based Valeant, which owns brands such as Bausch &
Lomb, had been trying woo Allergan for some time, people familiar
with the matter said, when Mr. Ackman approached it about working
together on a deal.
The deal, if successful, would create a behemoth in the global
eye-care and skin-care drug industries. Valeant and Allergan each
have a stock-market capitalization of more than $40 billion.
Valeant on Tuesday said it offered to swap each Allergan share
for $48.30 in cash and 0.83 Valeant shares. Based on Valeant's
closing price Monday, the deal valued Allergan at about $152.89 a
share.
Following the offer, Allergan shares jumped 16% to $164.21.
Valeant noted that its bid represents a substantial premium to
Allergan's price of $116.63 on April 10, the day before Mr.
Ackman's Pershing Square Capital Management L.P. crossed the 5%
ownership level and started buying more stock.
Pershing owns a 9.7% stake in Allergan. Valued at about $4
billion, the stake represents his biggest investment ever, people
familiar with the matter said. The firm has agreed to elect only
stock consideration in the transaction and intends to remain a
significant long-term shareholder of the combined company.
Allergan in a statement Tuesday confirmed receiving the offer,
and said its board and advisers would review it. Goldman Sachs
& Co. and BofA Merrill Lynch are serving as Allergan's
financial advisers, while Latham & Watkins is the company's
legal counsel.
Allergan added that shareholders don't need to take any action
at this time. Valeant Chief Financial Officer Howard Schiller, in a
news conference Tuesday, meanwhile urged Allergan shareholders to
reach out and talk. He argued that 43% ownership in a merged entity
would produce a diversified company with less exposure to
blockbuster drugs while still growing rapidly.
Valeant said it sees the deal creating at least $2.7 billion in
cost synergies, with 80% of that coming in the first six months. In
a news conference, Valeant Chief Financial Officer Howard Schiller
said the number broke down as $1.8 billion in cost savings and $900
million in revenue.
Mr. Schiller compared the Allergan transaction to Valeant's
recent purchase of Bausch & Lomb, which the company bought from
private equity. As with Bausch, he said, Valeant can cut costs by
reducing Allergan's headquarters and "decentralizing" the
business.
The combined company also would benefit from a high single-digit
tax rate, Valeant said.
In addition Tuesday, Valeant updated its guidance, saying it now
expects its first-quarter per-share cash earnings to meet or beat
analyst expectations. The company also raised its 2014 revenue
range by $100 million.
Valeant Chief Executive Michael Pearson said at the news
conference that the company would still look to do deals in the
wake of Allergan, although they are likely to be smaller, between
the size of $1 billion and $2 billion.
An activist who wants to see a company get sold generally
presses management to embark on a sale process. By teaming with
Valeant, Mr. Ackman--a noted and often controversial activist
investor--essentially eliminated a step, finding a willing buyer
for a target.
The strange bedfellows came together after Mr. Ackman was
introduced to Valeant by a Pershing Square employee who knows Mr.
Pearson. Mr. Ackman suggested he could help the Canadian company do
a deal at some point; Valeant told him that it was interested in
Allergan, of Irvine, Calif.
Aligning with Mr. Ackman gives Valeant a nearly 10% head start
in getting Allergan shareholders on its side. Plus, Mr. Ackman has
experience running hostile corporate campaigns.
Still, the alliance represents an unusual crack in a typically
sturdy wall between activists and companies. While companies have
been showing greater receptiveness to activist approaches in recent
years, in general, corporate America views activist investors as
adversaries, not allies.
Valeant has lined up investment banks Barclays PLC and Royal
Bank of Canada for financing.
A former McKinsey & Co. consultant, Mr. Pearson buys
companies and eliminates much of the research-and-development costs
while selling products through Valeant's existing sales force. He
also has taken advantage of relatively cheap debt and the lower tax
rates accorded companies based in certain countries overseas.
Mr. Pearson said earlier this year that he wants Valeant to be
among the top five pharmaceutical companies in the world by the end
of 2016.
With Valeant's growth fueled by acquisitions, some investors and
deal makers say the company's complexity makes its stock hard to
value.
Valeant and Allergan compete against each other in the global
eye-care and cosmetic-treatment markets. Allergan is best known for
products such as the anti-wrinkle treatment Botox, breast implants
and a product that increases the length of eyelashes.
It also sells prescription drugs treating eye conditions like
glaucoma and conjunctivitis. It has been facing the threat of
competition for key products such as its Restasis dry-eye drug, one
of its top-selling products.
Last year, Allergan reported $6.3 billion in revenue. Valeant
notched $5.8 billion in 2013 revenue.
Mr. Pearson has said he likes the eye-treatment market because
it is global and because governments and private health insurers
are willing to pay for the treatments.
He also has said he likes the market for cosmetic-treatment
products, because patients are willing to pay out of pocket.
Valeant sells its own version of a botulinum toxin wrinkle
treatment, called Dysport.
Valeant would be prepared to sell some assets to allay any
antitrust concerns, said a person familiar with the deal.
Mr. Pearson took the helm of Valeant in 2008 after a 23-year
career at McKinsey where he worked alongside CEOs on turnarounds,
acquisitions and strategy.
"We spend less than 5% of our revenues on research and
development," Mr. Pearson said in a 2012 interview with the
Journal. "Instead, our innovation comes from acquiring companies
and products that are already approved and in the market, so we
avoid the risk associated with R&D."
Liz Hoffman contributed to this article.
Write to David Benoit at david.benoit@wsj.com, Dana Mattioli at
dana.mattioli@wsj.com and Jonathan D. Rockoff at
jonathan.rockoff@wsj.com
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