Germany’s Merck to buy Sigma-Aldrich for $17bn to boost lab supplies operation

Largest acquisition to date points to focus on reliable lab supplies revenue rather than riskier drug development business

The Merck KGaA logo sits on a window at the pharmaceutical company’s headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
The Merck KGaA logo sits on a window at the pharmaceutical company’s headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg

Drugs and chemicals maker Merck agreed today to acquire US-based Sigma-Aldrich for $17 billion in cash to boost its lab supplies business, the biggest takeover in the German group's history.

The deal helps Merck, 70 per cent controlled by the descendants of its 17th century founder, to focus more on supplying drugmakers and academic institutions with chemicals and services, seen as offering a steadier income stream than drug development.

"With this acquisition we have the opportunity to turn one of our most reliable businesses into a core earnings contributor," said finance chief Marcus Kuhnert.

Merck, which has been hit by several drug development failures, said it was happy for its own pharmaceuticals business to remain a medium-sized entity.

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The deal was approved by Sigma-Aldrich’s management but still needs acceptance from more than 50 per cent of the target’s shareholders.

Merck said it will acquire Sigma-Aldrich shares for $140 apiece, a 36 per cent premium over the one-month average closing price and a 37 per cent more than the latest closing price of $102.37 on Friday last.

St Louis, Missouri-based Sigma had 2013 sales of $2.7 billion and provides big pharma groups including Pfizer and Novartis with lab substances such as cell culture substrates. It also makes chemicals for the technology sector and food testing products.

The combined lab supplies business would gain more exposure in North America and Asia, taking on global players such as Thermo Fisher Scientific.The deal would immediately top-up adjusted earnings per share.

The move comes as healthcare companies strike deals at a record pace, with year-to-date activity in the sector topping $380 billion, well over double the year-ago level, according to Thomson Reuters data.

It represents the second major transatlantic deal for a German company in the space of a few hours, after Siemens agreed to buy oilfield equipment maker Dresser-Rand for $7.6 billion.

Shares in Merck, which initially turned negative on the news, closed 4.3 per cent higher at €72.63, against a 0.2 per cent lower European chemicals index.

Merck expects the tie-up, funded from about €2 billion in cash reserves and the issue of new debt, to yield annual synergy benefits of €260 million within three years after closing, by measures such as streamlining manufacturing, administration and research.

It said it was too early to say if any jobs would be cut.

The deal would more than double the lab equipment unit’s adjusted core earnings, even without such synergy gains; including them, the increase would be 139 per cent, based on proforma 2013 results.

“The fact that [the Merck family] are not taking a big step further into pharma shows that continuous returns on their investment over time are certainly important to the family,” said analyst Ulrich Huwald at brokerage Warburg.

At about €6 billion in annual sales, Merck’s pharmaceuticals unit is well outside the global top 20, having suffered a series of drug development setbacks such as with an experimental cancer vaccine known as tecemotide, or Stimuvax, which did not come to market due to poor study results.

The group said today that alliances, not major takeovers, would be the way forward for the unit.

“The pharmaceuticals business [will] remain a good and solid mid-sized player”, chief executive Karl- Ludwig Kley said.

Merck had earlier this year signalled that big pharma assets were on its radar and some analysts took a positive view on the fact it had steered clear of such moves.

Citi analyst Andrew Baum said in a note the acquisition came at a steep premium of about 30 times Sigma’s expected 2015 earnings per share, but argued the deal was better than buying a biotech or pharmaceutical asset given what he said was Merck’s “long-standing poor track record in pharmaceutical R&D”.

Merck, the largest maker of liquid crystals for TV and computer screens, made lab supplies a major pillar of its business when it purchased US group Millipore for $6 billion in 2010. Combining with Sigma would make it one of the global market's top three, the group said.

Merck’s biggest deal before this one was the takeover of Swiss biotech company Serono for €10.3 billion.

Initial bridge loans to finance the deal will be replaced by about €4 billion in bank loans and €7 billion in bonds. Merck said strong combined cash flows would allow for rapid deleveraging.

Guggenheim Securities and JP Morgan advised Merck on the deal, together with law firm Skadden, while Morgan Stanley acted as financial adviser to Sigma-Aldrich, with Sidley Austin as legal adviser. – Reuters