Subject category:
Finance, Accounting and Control
Published by:
Harvard Business Publishing
Version: 24 April 2023
Length: 24 pages
Data source: Published sources
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https://casecent.re/p/193547
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Abstract
The case explores the intersection of capital allocation and shareholder activism in the biopharmaceutical industry. As many biopharma companies face looming patent expirations for key medicines, the case asks the question of whether investing in R&D and M&A is an imperative. Three biopharma companies have been under scrutiny by Elliott Management, one of the largest shareholder activists for various reasons. The range of investment options for biopharma companies are outlined, including investing in the business via R&D and M&A, and returning capital to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases. The uniqueness of large biopharma companies is reviewed including enviable profit margins, significant risk in R&D, questionable perpetuity value, and the pressure from shareholder activists to prudently deploy capital.
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Abstract
The case explores the intersection of capital allocation and shareholder activism in the biopharmaceutical industry. As many biopharma companies face looming patent expirations for key medicines, the case asks the question of whether investing in R&D and M&A is an imperative. Three biopharma companies have been under scrutiny by Elliott Management, one of the largest shareholder activists for various reasons. The range of investment options for biopharma companies are outlined, including investing in the business via R&D and M&A, and returning capital to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases. The uniqueness of large biopharma companies is reviewed including enviable profit margins, significant risk in R&D, questionable perpetuity value, and the pressure from shareholder activists to prudently deploy capital.
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