Using in-house sales forecasts, this analysis explores and visualizes market dynamics in the Big Pharma peer set out to 2025.
Low-cost and skilled workforces in China and India have positioned both countries as increasingly important manufacturing hubs for pharmaceutical companies, as they seek to contain costs while retaining quality outsourcing partners.
Despite the apparent inevitability of the contract manufacturing organization (CMO) sector’s growth in China and India, a recent wave of scandals has put significant dents in the reputations of both countries as locations for foreign firms to manufacture drugs. Rising costs have also caused some firms to question whether using one of the region’s many CMOs is worth the risk.
Analysis of Actelion’s prescription pharmaceutical sales encompassing global corporate strategy, marketed portfolio, pipeline potential, and financial performance over 2015–25.
Between 2011 and 2015, Big Pharma – a peer set of approximately 16 firms across the world with large R&D and sales organizations, and sales valued at $10bn or more – signed over 1,100 drug-focused deals, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 10%.
Datamonitor’s Japan Pharma peer set contains the top 10 companies headquartered in Japan: Takeda Pharmaceuticals, Astellas Pharma, Daiichi Sankyo, Otsuka Pharmaceutical, Eisai, Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma, Chugai Pharmaceutical, Dainippon Sumitomo, Shionogi & Co and Kyowa Hakko Kirin.
Big Pharma is poised for growth due to strong launch portfolios, the availability of high-potential pipeline assets, and companies’ sharpened focus on high-performing markets.
Tumbling over the patent cliff, many Big Pharma companies are being forced to find new strategies for sustaining sales growth, wherever possible minimizing the risk of generic competition.
Datamonitor Healthcare previews Q2 2016 earnings for companies in the PharmaVitae portfolio. Companies will be continuously added the day before presentations.
Capital allocation and M&A continue to remain levers of growth as cash reserves grow and debt remains cheap. Many companies are looking towards core-strengthening asset purchases, low-scale asset divestments, and cost-saving tax inversions.
Datamonitor Healthcare’s PharmaVitae team explores the value in the flurry of recent deals, shedding light on incentives and how they may influence the market and future deal-making. With short-term challenges seeing top line revenue from the PharmaVitae portfolio to grow by a modestly in 2016, transactions will aim to counter industry headwinds.
Total sales from the mid pharma peer set amounted to $69.4bn in 2011; by the end of 2012, this figure rose by 1.6% to $71.0bn. During 2012 the peer set constituents exhibited varying degrees of sales growth.
Datamonitor Healthcare’s PharmaVitae team explores the value in the flurry of recent deals, shedding light on incentives and how
they may influence the market and future deal-making.
Sign up to the Pharma Intelligence Report Store Newsletter to get the latest blogs, news, reports and discounts!