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J&J accepts $4B Carlyle offer for diagnostics unit

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NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. — Johnson & Johnson has accepted an offer of about $4 billion from the private equity firm the Carlyle Group to buy its Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics business.

J&J said Monday that the deal for the blood-testing unit should close by mid-year.

The New Brunswick, N.J., health care giant had said in January that Washington, D.C.-based Carlyle Group had offered $4.15 billion for the business, and that it would talk to works councils and trade unions representing its employees before making a decision.

The Ortho-Clinical business serves hospitals, testing laboratories and blood banks. It supplies equipment and chemicals to screen donated blood for HIV, hepatitis C and other serious diseases. It also makes technology for advanced testing of blood to diagnose health conditions and to monitor medication effects.

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Ortho Clinical Diagnostics is based in Raritan, N.J., and employs more than 4,500 employees. It runs factories in Rochester, N.Y.; Pompano Beach, Fla.; and Pencoed, Wales.

J&J CEO Alex Gorsky had said last year the company was looking at strategic options for Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, which doesn’t meet the company’s long-held strategy of focusing on businesses that rank first or second in their markets.

J&J had received two other offers for the division, people familiar with the situation said: a joint bid from Blackstone Group and Danaher Corp., and a combined offer from CVC Capital Partners Ltd. and Leonard Green & Partners.

Shares of J&J rose 79 cents, less than 1%, to $98.23.

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