November 25, 2008 8:50 PM
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Pharma Roundup: AstraZeneca and Teva Mend Fences, Barbara Ryan's M&A Speculation, and More
(MoneyWatch) AstraZeneca and Teva resolve dispute over asthma med -- AZ reacted quickly when Teva started shipping a generic version of Pulmicort Respules last week, before official patent expiration. The fight could have been ugly, but the parties reached a settlement in which Teva will get exclusive rights to a copycat license, with distribution beginning in December 2009. [Source: Pharmalot]
Merger speculation -- Analyst Barbara Ryan of Deutsche Bank, a frequent commentator on Big Pharma, has released a report full of M&A predictions. She picks Pfizer, Merck, and BMS as likely buyers; BMS, Wyeth, Amgen, and Gilead as likely acquisitions; and Pfizer as the one with the most to gain from pursuing a buyout. [Source: WSJ Health Blog]
EU criticizes "strategic patenting" -- An upcoming report from the EU's Competition Commission will scrutinize the practice of making minor changes to a compound in order to secure longer patent protection. [Source: PharmaGossip]
An ultimatum from Indonesia -- As many pharma companies outsource operations overseas, the Indonesian government will require companies with licenses to sell drugs in Indonesia to build production facilities in the country within two years. [Source: PharmaTimes]
Merger speculation -- Analyst Barbara Ryan of Deutsche Bank, a frequent commentator on Big Pharma, has released a report full of M&A predictions. She picks Pfizer, Merck, and BMS as likely buyers; BMS, Wyeth, Amgen, and Gilead as likely acquisitions; and Pfizer as the one with the most to gain from pursuing a buyout. [Source: WSJ Health Blog]
EU criticizes "strategic patenting" -- An upcoming report from the EU's Competition Commission will scrutinize the practice of making minor changes to a compound in order to secure longer patent protection. [Source: PharmaGossip]
An ultimatum from Indonesia -- As many pharma companies outsource operations overseas, the Indonesian government will require companies with licenses to sell drugs in Indonesia to build production facilities in the country within two years. [Source: PharmaTimes]
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