Investec Switzerland. The soaring cost of some medicines has sparked a controversy that’s hampered drugmakers’ ability to raise prices in their biggest and most profitable market. © Robert Byron | Dreamstime.com Novartis AG Chief Executive Officer Joe Jimenez figures the golden days of unfettered price increases are over in the U.S. “Those days are over,” Jimenez said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Manus Cranny. “You have to assume that there is going to be increased price pressure in the U.S.” The shift Jimenez describes comes after months of debate — and regulatory scrutiny — over the cost of some drugs such as the heart medicines Nitropress and Isuprel, whose prices soared 212 percent and 525 percent respectively after Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. acquired the rights to sell them. Novartis, the maker of the blockbuster cancer drug Gleevec, is responding to the expected pressure by pooling its manufacturing operations to cut costs, according to Jimenez. “We have to exist no matter what the pricing environment is going to look like,” he said. “Novartis is taking decisive action so that over the next few years we will be able to lower our cost base and still invest in R&D, which is really the lifeblood of this industry.
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Investec considers the following as important: Business & Economy, Drug price increases, Investec Switzerland, Joe Jimenez Novartis, Novartis, Novartis Basel, US drug price pressure, US drug price resistance
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The soaring cost of some medicines has sparked a controversy that’s hampered drugmakers’ ability to raise prices in their biggest and most profitable market.
Novartis AG Chief Executive Officer Joe Jimenez figures the golden days of unfettered price increases are over in the U.S.
“Those days are over,” Jimenez said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Manus Cranny. “You have to assume that there is going to be increased price pressure in the U.S.”
The shift Jimenez describes comes after months of debate — and regulatory scrutiny — over the cost of some drugs such as the heart medicines Nitropress and Isuprel, whose prices soared 212 percent and 525 percent respectively after Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. acquired the rights to sell them.
Novartis, the maker of the blockbuster cancer drug Gleevec, is responding to the expected pressure by pooling its manufacturing operations to cut costs, according to Jimenez. “We have to exist no matter what the pricing environment is going to look like,” he said. “Novartis is taking decisive action so that over the next few years we will be able to lower our cost base and still invest in R&D, which is really the lifeblood of this industry.”
The Basel, Switzerland-based company reported fourth-quarter profit that missed analysts’ estimates on Wednesday, hampered by a slump at its eye-care unit Alcon. The stock fell as much as 3.9 percent, the steepest drop in more than four months, in Zurich trading.
By Marthe Fourcade, Bloomberg.