4 Huge Pharma Deals in 4 Months Is Just the Beginning

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I'm still waiting for the trees in my yard to sprout leaves, but we've already seen half-a-dozen drugmaker deals worth around $100 billion in total this year. Despite a slew of mergers and acquisitions (M&A) over the past several months, there are still some cash-laden big biotechs and pharmaceutical companies eager to bulk up their development pipelines.

It's never a good idea to buy a stock solely because you hope it will soon be acquired at a premium. That said, many of the attributes that make takeout targets attractive are important features in any M&A climate. A quick look at why these big drugmakers are willing to pay through the nose for their smaller peers could help you spot a winner down the road.

Acquirer

Acquiree

Transaction Value

Takeda (NASDAQOTH: TKPYY)

Shire (NASDAQ: SHPG)

$64 billion (estimate)

Novartis (NYSE: NVS)

AveXis (NASDAQ: AVXS)

$8.7 billion

Sanofi (NYSE: SNY)

Bioverativ

$11.6 billion

Celgene (NASDAQ: CELG)

Juno Therapeutics

$9.0 billion

Time to leave home?

If Shire accepts Takeda's bid for $64 billion, it will probably be the biggest pharma deal of the year. It also will net Shire's shareholders a 60% premium above the stock's closing price ahead of the negotiations.

Why is the 235-year-old Japanese drugmaker so eager to buy a British company? Takeda wants to be a global biopharma heavyweight player, but the company books more product sales in Japan than in the U.S. Shire is headquartered in Ireland, but it records around two-thirds of its sales in the enormous U.S. market for prescription drugs. Shire's ADHD and hemophilia drugs pushed total U.S. sales to $9.5 billion last year, which nearly is enough to double Takeda's presence in the region.

Combining Takeda's international operations with Shire's also would create the leading life-sciences employer in the state of Massachusetts. That means Takeda could quickly become top dog at the world's most productive hub for biotechnology research.

Pills in a tiny shopping cart on a pile of cash.
Pills in a tiny shopping cart on a pile of cash.

Image source: Getty Images.

From large to rare

Sanofi's an international pharma giant with a healthy presence in the enormous U.S. market for diabetes treatments. Unfortunately, its long-acting insulin, Lantus, is showing its age. Sales of the 18-year-old drug fell 19%, to $5.6 billion last year. That's around 16% of total revenue, so continued losses will create a stiff headwind to overcome.

Insurers and pharmacy benefits managers are getting better at negotiating drug prices in an increasingly competitive environment for diabetes drugs. Medicines that treat rare diseases generally encounter less pushback, which explains why Sanofi is investing heavily into next-generation hemophilia drugs that coincidentally compete with Shire's portfolio.