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Biogen to Buy Reata for $7.3 Billion in Rare-Disease Deal

2023-07-28 22:56
Biogen Inc. agreed to acquire Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc. for $7.3 billion, including debt, to expand its rare disease
Biogen to Buy Reata for $7.3 Billion in Rare-Disease Deal

Biogen Inc. agreed to acquire Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc. for $7.3 billion, including debt, to expand its rare disease treatments in one of its biggest-ever acquisitions.

The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotech company will pay $172.50 in cash for each Reata share, it said in a statement Friday, confirming an earlier Bloomberg News report. That represents a 59% premium to Reata’s Thursday closing price.

Reata received US Food and Drug Administration approval in February for Skyclarys, the first approved treatment for Friedreich’s ataxia, a rare inherited disease that can affect children as young as five and causes impaired walking and coordination. The treatment could generate peak sales of $1.5 billion, according to Barclays forecasts.

“This gives us another driver of growth,” Biogen Chief Executive Officer Christopher Viehbacher said on a conference call with analysts, adding that the deal came together “very quickly.” He said that his company would be able to market the drug with Biogen’s existing sales force given the “huge overlap” between doctors who see Friedreich’s ataxia patients and those who treat spinal muscular atrophy, where Biogen already has one of the leading drugs.

Reata shares rose more than 52% at 10:32 a.m., while Biogen shares were flat.

Bloomberg News reported earlier Friday that Biogen was exploring a potential acquisition of Reata. Biogen plans to finance the deal with cash and by issuing debt. The company expects the deal to add to earnings starting in 2025.

Company Transition

Biogen is in transition as it attempts to broaden its focus and come up with new growth to replace aging multiple sclerosis drugs. Viehbacher, who took over as CEO last year, has promised to redesign the company and reduce its dependence on risky neurology research without eliminating the ability to pursue hard diseases like Alzheimer’s. He has highlighted rare diseases as an area of interest.

Reata’s lead product is both a rare disease drug and a neurology medicine. Approved in February, it treats a rare inherited neurological disease that afflicts roughly 1 in 50,000 people, according to the FDA.

“Acquiring Skyclarys falls directly in the rare disease category, which is consistent with management’s prior commentary related to area of focus for potential M&A deals,” Wedbush Securities analyst Laura Chico wrote in a note to clients. She said there were “many parallels” between this transaction and Sanofi’s acquisition of Genzyme Corp. in 2011 during Viehbacher’s tenure as CEO of the French drugmaker.

Like many recently approved neurology drugs, Skyclarys had a complicated path to approval. After a mid-stage study yielded positive results, Reata said in November 2020 that it might have to conduct another big study to confirm the results in order to gain clearance. But less than a year later, after meeting with the FDA again, Reata said that it would be able to submit for approval without a new study.

After it filed for approval last year, Reata said that the FDA would likely convene a meeting of outside advisers to review the drug, a step the agency often takes for complicated or controversial applications. But in October, after it submitted new analysis, Reata said the agency decided not to hold the hearing. That paved the way for approval.

Declining Sales

The deal is subject to approval by shareholders of Plano, Texas-based Reata and is expected to close in the fourth quarter. Investors holding 36% of the voting power of Reata’s common stock have agreed to support the deal. The Betaville blog wrote on Thursday about market speculation that Reata had attracted takeover interest.

Biogen isn’t known for doing large deals. In 2013, it bought the remaining stake in the multiple sclerosis medicine Tysabri for $3.25 billion in cash from its partner Elan Corp. In 2020, it acquired a minority stake in Sage Therapeutics Inc. for about $1.5 billion. Biogen’s shares have fallen about 5% this year, giving it a market value of around $38 billion.

Earlier this week, Biogen said it would cut 1,000 jobs, or more than 11% of its workforce, and reduce operating expenses in an attempt to grapple with declining sales from treatment for multiple sclerosis, its biggest drug category.

Biogen received FDA approval earlier this year for its drug Qalsody to treat a rare form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, sometimes called Lou Gehrig’s disease, which destroys nerve cells that control voluntary muscle movement including breathing.

Lazard Ltd. advised Biogen on the deal, while Reata worked with Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

(Adds Biogen CEO comment from conference call in fourth paragraph)

Author: Michelle F. Davis, Dinesh Nair and Robert Langreth