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Mylan to Buy Drug Maker

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From Reuters

Mylan Laboratories Inc., one of the world’s biggest makers of generic drugs, has agreed to acquire King Pharmaceuticals Inc. for about $3.37 billion in stock to expand its branded drug business, the companies said Monday.

The transaction was not welcomed by Mylan’s shareholders, who sent the company’s shares down more than 16% amid concern that King is not worth the price.

King’s most important product is Altace, a drug for hypertension that generates annual sales of about $450 million. Mylan hopes to use the Altace sales force to help market a new hypertension drug of its own called nebivolol, which is being reviewed by the Food and Drug Administration.

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But some analysts said nebivolol might not be successful enough to justify spending so much on a sales force. And King’s other products, such as the muscle relaxant Skelaxin, may face generic competition within the next two years.

The agreement initially valued King at $4 billion, based on Mylan’s closing stock price Friday. But the drop in Mylan’s share price slashed the value of the deal to about $3.37 billion.

Shares of Mylan were down $3 to $15.51 on the New York Stock Exchange. King shares jumped 24% to $12.89, up $2.52, also on the NYSE.

King has been struggling to maintain earnings growth and faces a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into its pricing practices.

For the 12 months ended March 31, Mylan and King combined had about $3 billion in revenue and about $650 million in operating cash flow. They had a combined workforce of nearly 6,000 and a sales force of almost 1,400.

King shareholders will get 0.9 share of Mylan for each King share held.

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