Since 2010, approximately 200 pharmaceutical and biotech deals have taken place per year in the United States. In 2014, only 182 major deals took place, lower than average (~190).
However, 2014 surpassed the combined value of deals from 2011-2013 ($178bn) and saw over $200bn in mergers and acquisitions, a 300% increase from the previous year.
Pan (Alkem) Brand Dissertition PresentationDhaval Vaghela
- The document discusses a dissertation on the pantoprazole brand Pan. It provides brand facts, research objectives, findings from research conducted with 150 doctors, a SWOT analysis, and recommendations.
- Key findings include that 36% of doctors named Pan as the first brand that comes to mind for pantoprazole. 44% of doctors said they like nothing about Pan specifically. The most common indications for which doctors prescribe Pan are GERD, hyperacidity, and gastritis.
- Most doctors reported being promoted Pan once or twice per month and prescribing it for 10-20 patients monthly. Overall familiarity with the brand was high but specific attributes liked were low.
Pharmaceutical marketing in the 21st centuryRamdas Dolas
The document discusses the pharmaceutical industry in India. It notes that India supplies over 50% of global demand for various vaccines, 40% of generic demand in the US, and 25% of medicine in the UK, making it a leading pharma producer. The industry is growing rapidly at a 22.4% CAGR and is valued at $33 billion in 2017. India also accounts for 20% of global exports in generics, with exports reaching $17.27 billion in 2017-18. The domestic generics market is large as well and expected to reach $27.9 billion by 2020. The biotech industry is also seeing robust growth and estimated to reach $100 billion by 2024-25.
Ipca Laboratories Ltd. is an Indian pharmaceutical company founded in 1949 that manufactures pharmaceuticals and drugs. It has manufacturing facilities across India and international presences in the US, UK, and other countries. Ipca is the largest manufacturer of anti-malarial drugs in India, with its top formulation brands including Zerodol, Lariago, and Lumerax. The company employs a therapy-focused marketing strategy and maintains divisions for areas like cardiology and neuropsychiatry. Ipca focuses on high value products, entry into the US market through partnerships, ANDA filings, and expanding its product range in therapeutic areas like nephrology.
Thomas Müller, MD & Pharmacist, Head of Pharmaceuticals Dept Federal Joint Committee.
Pharma Pricing & Market Access Congress 2017
22 February 2017
London
Analysis of what patient services proposed by pharma companies should be. This document explains: 1. why patient centricity is essential? - 2. how to craft a patient-centric strategy? - 3. How to implement patient-centric initiatives?
Role of Medical Representative | PharmaaddaAditiMehra14
Know what is the Role of Medical Sale Representative from this article. If you are looking for more information regarding the Role of Medical representative then visit http://www.pharmaadda.in/role-of-medical-representative
Description of the ELITE Program based on four pillers: 1. the prescriber insight - 2. the brand preference mix - 3. the the high impact interactions - 4. Job passion
Branding and its Potential within the Pharmaceutical Industry
1) Branding is important for pharmaceutical companies to differentiate their products from competitors and build long-term customer loyalty. Strong brands provide value through personalized relationships and competitive advantages.
2) Successful branding requires defining the brand's positioning, personality, values, and unique attributes that support those values. It also involves crafting how the brand visually appears to its audience through elements like name, packaging, and advertising.
3) For pharmaceutical companies, branding is especially crucial due to the highly competitive and regulated nature of the industry. Building brand value and trust takes significant long-term investment but pays off through increased revenue and customer retention.
Pharmaceutical Marketing - Whats in store for patients?brandsynapse
This document discusses trends in pharmaceutical marketing and advertising spending from 1996 to 2010. Key points include:
- U.S. pharmaceutical ad spending peaked at $5.4 billion in 2006 but has declined each year since to $4.3 billion in 2010 due to fewer blockbuster drugs, a smaller new drug pipeline, and cost cutting.
- The top spender in 2010 was Pfizer at $967.5 million, though its drug Lipitor will go off patent in 2011. Other top drugs like Plavix and Singulair will also lose patent protection.
- As mainstream breakthrough drugs become fewer, pharmaceutical marketers will need to create more value for newer drugs with smaller benefits and target niche patient
The document summarizes the journey that pharmaceutical companies must undertake to successfully implement a Key Account Management (KAM) approach. It describes the typical stages in the KAM journey for both business-to-business companies and pharmaceutical companies. For pharmaceutical companies, the journey begins with different challenges compared to other industries due to existing high contact with customers but low impact on decision makers. The key steps are to coordinate promotional channels, connect customer needs to decisions, and overcome traditional product-centric focus. Successful implementation requires being realistic about capabilities, mastering basics before advancing, and anticipating obstacles at each stage of the KAM journey.
The document provides an overview of Sanofi, a major global pharmaceutical company, including:
- Its operations in over 100 countries with over 100,000 employees and 19,300 scientists
- Its business entities and therapeutic expertise in the Philippines, focusing on cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, oncology, and other areas
- Details on its organizational structure, vision and mission statements, research and development process, product types, supply chain, and performance in the diabetes drug category market
This document provides a marketing plan for a medical app called Medoc. The app aims to create a forum for doctors to discuss difficult patient cases and locate other doctors for consultations. It also allows patients to search for doctors, book appointments, and access health tips. The plan outlines tactics to target urban users in metro cities by offering doctors a free basic app with a premium subscription option and providing patients free services. The implementation section discusses building infrastructure and processes to manage operations, marketing, and technology development over a 6 month period before launching promotional campaigns.
This document is a project report submitted by Nigam Prasad Panda to Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and IMI Bhubaneswar on sales and distribution management at Glenmark. It begins with acknowledgments to the company guide and faculty guide. It then provides an undertaking by the student. The body of the report provides an introduction and overview of Glenmark, its product portfolio, sales structure and organization structure, distribution channels and strategies, marketing mix, and sales team selection process. It concludes with recommendations.
This document provides an agenda and overview for a pharmaceutical sales training. It covers key selling concepts and steps including defining the customer's needs, presenting product benefits, handling objections, discussing price, and closing the sale. The 7 basic selling steps are outlined as 1) pre-call planning, 2) opening, 3) questioning, 4) presentation, 5) handling objections, 6) closing, and 7) post-call analysis. Key frameworks like DAPA (define, accept, prove, accept) and techniques like the funnel method and sandwich method for discussing price are also summarized. The overall aim is to develop an effective sales approach to create success for pharmaceutical brands.
This document discusses the key steps in marketing a new product: pre-launch ads to build awareness, the product release to introduce the product to customers, and active marketing after release. It focuses on the importance of having proper procedures for product release to ensure only compliant products reach customers. An effective marketing process involves evaluating the market, planning strategies through a marketing plan, and implementing/monitoring the strategies. The marketing plan should include a SWOT analysis, goals/objectives, target markets, the marketing mix, and control processes to track performance.
This document summarizes a marketing program submitted by Deepak Khandelwal for Apollo Pharmacy, a large retail pharmacy chain in Asia. The program involved collecting data on customer foot traffic, prescription levels, and satisfaction surveys. Tables show customer visits, sales, and prescription numbers for different Apollo pharmacy locations over three days. A questionnaire was used to collect customer feedback on service quality. Analysis found customers were generally satisfied with staff courtesy and quality of drugs available. Suggestions include improving promotional activities and better understanding demand, supply and competitors.
The document discusses trends in the healthcare industry in the United States. It notes that healthcare accounts for 18% of the US economy and demand for healthcare jobs is growing rapidly. Between 2010 and 2020, the number of healthcare jobs will increase from 10.1 million to 13.1 million. The document also highlights that most new healthcare jobs will require postsecondary education and there will be a need for workers to continuously update their skills and learning through their careers.
information regarding psychopharmacology especially for nursing students and community. covers all group like anti psychotic, anti anxiety, antidepressants, mood stabilizing agents etc.
1) Antidepressant use has greatly increased over the last 30 years, with antidepressants now being the most commonly prescribed drug in the US. However, some experts argue they are overprescribed for issues that could be addressed through therapy or lifestyle changes.
2) Studies have found antidepressants to be only slightly more effective than placebo pills, but other analyses found flaws in how the original data was interpreted. The effectiveness of antidepressants does not depend on the severity of depression.
3) While antidepressants can help some people, there are concerns about overreliance on quick fix medication solutions rather than addressing underlying issues through therapy or lifestyle changes. Long term use should be reserved for severe cases.
This document lists and summarizes apps for exploring outer space topics in grades K-5. It recommends using virtual field trips connected to learning objectives to provide background knowledge and extend student thinking. It then lists and tags 18 specific apps for exploring topics like the solar system, astronomy, NASA, moon phases, and more. It concludes by suggesting related classroom activities like writing prompts, independent reading, and video tutorials.
Psychotherapeutic medications have been used to treat mental illness for centuries. In the 1940s-1950s, early treatments included marijuana, amphetamines, insulin shock therapy, and electroshock therapy. In 1949, lithium was discovered and became one of the first psychotropic drugs used long-term to treat bipolar disorder. Chlorpromazine, first used in the 1950s, significantly reduced hospitalizations and led to deinstitutionalization, though this had some unintended consequences. Today, the most commonly prescribed medications are antidepressants and anti-anxiety drugs, which provide relief for most patients.
In a health care system where consumers are empowered to actively choose among health plans, providers, and treatment options, delivering a satisfying customer experience is key to differentiation. The first step towards winning in a consumer-centric marketplace: understand how this new informed and engaged consumer views the health care system and how they define quality and value.
For more, check out the full report on the quest for value in health care: https://www.deloitte.com/view/en_US/us/Insights/centers/center-for-health-solutions/b57d260a4ac35410VgnVCM3000003456f70aRCRD.htm
Across all industries, businesses are adapting and saving time with how they are using and managing data today.
Learn how your business can Integrate NetApp storage platforms with healthcare data solutions: http://www.netapp.com/us/solutions/industry/healthcare/
Making data work for providers, patients, payers, and population health. In healthcare, using this data in meaningful ways has the potential for people to live longer healthier lives.
Be sure to check out NetApp's healthcare solutions page: http://www.netapp.com/us/solutions/industry/healthcare/
Read the latest benefits information from Independent Medicare broker Erin Hart from American HealthCare Group. Learn about Medicare income limits, care plans, and topics to consider when planning for health benefits in retirement.
Data-driven decisions for healthcare - Unleash Enterprise Innovation3Capgemini
With HP Converged System for Microsoft APS, Power BI and Sogeti, you can easily get started visualizing, modeling and reporting data insights for the healthcare industry through what we call the Unleash Enterprise Innovation3 solution. Learn how your organization can easily unite your relational inpatient and outpatient data with non-relational data from public sources and social media, allowing you to capture and analyze the data that will effectively impact your decision-making processes.
Transformational themes that will shake the world of healthcare improvementNHS Improving Quality
The document discusses leading change from the edges of organizations. It provides five ways to lead change from the edges and thrive: 1) embrace disruption, 2) curate knowledge, 3) build bridges to connect disconnected groups, 4) roll with resistance by taking a dialogic approach, and 5) recognize that leading change starts from within oneself. It also describes a case study of the School for Health and Care Radicals, a virtual school for training change agents that was set up with three weeks' notice and had over 1,500 enrollees from 27 countries.
Understand what patient engagement truly means, its benefits for both patients and providers, and how to increase patient engagement through marketing.
The document summarizes the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) which repeals the Sustainable Growth Rate formula and shifts Medicare payments to value-based and alternative payment models. MACRA establishes two payment tracks - the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APMs). MIPS consolidates existing quality programs and provides payment incentives or penalties based on a performance score. APMs offer additional rewards for physicians meeting thresholds for payments or patients in eligible models.
Pharmaceutical Mergs Acquisitions in the USCapgemini
The document analyzes trends in pharmaceutical mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in the US from 2007-2015. It finds that M&A deal value and count increased dramatically in 2014, driven primarily by a few "megadeals" over $5 billion. However, over 90% of deals were smaller acquisitions under $5 billion. These smaller acquisitions typically aimed to acquire companies with recent drug approvals, promising pipelines, or expertise in specific technologies. The document also finds a correlation between small biotech companies being acquired within a few months of receiving a new drug approval.
Merck Paper Securities and Protfolio AnalysisJason Sandoy
Merck & Co. is a large pharmaceutical company that produces many drugs across different medical fields. The report recommends buying Merck stock based on its large drug pipeline, cost savings initiatives, and undervaluation relative to estimates. Merck allocates billions to research and development each year to develop new drugs and maintain a diverse portfolio to drive future growth. While some ratios show Merck lagging competitors, its growth rates exceed industry averages, and initiatives to reduce costs are expected to increase returns. Overall the report finds Merck positioned for continued growth and profitability.
This document summarizes analysis of unpartnered pharmaceutical products from Medtrack in September 2015. It finds that opportunities remain abundant, with many preclinical and early-stage candidates in private company pipelines as well as late-stage candidates in public company pipelines. Oncology remains the leading therapeutic area for unpartnered drugs. Several private and public companies are highlighted that have significant unpartnered pipelines that could be candidates for partnership or acquisition deals. The document analyzes Phase III candidates in more detail and finds some oncology drugs that have above average likelihood of approval based on proprietary modeling.
The document summarizes key findings from EvaluatePharma's 2014 Orphan Drug Report. It finds that worldwide orphan drug sales are forecast to reach $176 billion by 2020, almost double the growth of the overall prescription drug market. Orphan drugs are expected to account for 19.1% of worldwide prescription sales by 2020. The report also notes that Soliris, used to treat rare blood disorders, generates the highest revenue per patient of any orphan drug in the US.
This document analyzes and dispels five common myths about the drug delivery industry. It argues that drug delivery has delivered many new products, the market is growing not declining, the business model can be sustainable, product line extensions using drug delivery approaches are effective strategies, and drug delivery companies offer diverse technologies, not just similar controlled release solutions. The drug delivery industry plays a key role in addressing challenges in pharma by developing improved treatment options.
The document analyzes and dispels five common myths about the drug delivery industry. It argues that far from being a declining sector, drug delivery has delivered steady product approvals over the past decade and continues to be an important source of new products. It also contends that the drug delivery market is growing, drug delivery business models can be sustainable, product line extensions using drug delivery technologies are effective strategies, and drug delivery companies offer diverse technologies, not just similar controlled release solutions.
The pharmaceutical industry is shifting away from the blockbuster drug model. Large pharmaceutical companies are using mergers and acquisitions to adapt, with some acquiring generic drug makers or biotech companies. This provides access to new markets and revenue streams but carries risks as generics have low margins. Companies are also collaborating more within the industry and beyond to innovate new business models and remain profitable in changing times.
This document summarizes research examining factors that impact the valuation of biotechnology firms. It finds that advancement of drugs through clinical trials is associated with increased firm value, while drug failures are associated with decreased value. Surprisingly, partnerships and alliances do not seem to result in better performance than independent firms. The presence of medical doctors on boards of directors is associated with higher valuation metrics. Small cap biotech firms seem less likely to get drug approvals, possibly because promising small firms are acquired. Higher approval rates are seen for AIDS/cancer drugs and when financiers make up more of the board.
This document provides a business plan for a new pharmaceutical company called NEWTech Advant. The plan includes a situation analysis of the pharmaceutical market, noting trends like an aging population and increased regulation. It outlines NEWTech Advant's goals of improving existing drugs and discovering new ones. The marketing strategy discusses targeting physicians and patients aged 45+, and increasing market share through advertising. Financial objectives include achieving profitability in three years. The plan also analyzes strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats for the new company.
Antitrust Aspects of Acquiring a Generic Drug ManufacturerNexsen Pruet
The document discusses antitrust issues related to acquisitions of generic drug manufacturers, including an overview of FTC enforcement actions challenging mergers in this industry from 1995 to present. It outlines criteria the FTC applies in their analysis, such as the impact of branded drugs on generics, delivery methods, number of competitors, and parties' innovation pipelines. The FTC takes into account these factors to determine whether a merger will reduce competition and harm consumers in generic drug markets.
Dsp investor deck william blair june 2015DiplomatIR
Diplomat Pharmacy provides concise summaries in 3 sentences or less that provide the high level and essential information from the document. The document discusses Diplomat Pharmacy's strengths in specialty pharmacy, growth opportunities, and competitive positioning. It highlights Diplomat's focus on growing specialty infusion and pursuing strategic acquisitions to expand in high margin businesses. Diplomat also gains share in core therapeutic areas like oncology and immunology through new limited distribution drug contracts.
The document recommends an overweight position in the healthcare biotechnology industry. Major companies are seeing double digit revenue growth and high profit margins due to limited competition from patents. However, government regulation poses a threat if it imposes price caps or reduces patent lives. Additionally, companies rely on a small number of "star drugs" whose expiration or replacement could significantly harm their value.
The contract research organization (CRO) industry is a multi-billion dollar industry that is expected to grow substantially over the next five years. There are over 1,000 CROs globally, ranging in size from small firms to large publicly traded companies. The top five CROs capture over a third of total industry revenue, suggesting market consolidation. Growth in the industry is driven by increasing complexity and size of clinical trials, globalization of drug development, and pharmaceutical industry cost containment pressures that encourage further outsourcing of services.
This document provides an overview of marketing strategies used by pharmaceutical companies in India. It begins with background on the large size of the global pharmaceutical industry and growth of the Indian pharmaceutical industry. The marketing challenges described include increased competition, lack of customer knowledge, and ineffective customer acquisition, development and retention strategies. The document then outlines two common business models - the super core model focusing on a small number of blockbuster drugs, and the core model marketing a larger number of drugs across therapeutic areas. The goals of the proposed research are to identify factors affecting competitiveness, investigate effective customer strategies, and provide alternative strategies to improve competitiveness.
Research Paper Writing
Writekraft Research and Publications LLP was initially formed, informally, in 2006 by a group of scholars to help fellow students. Gradually, with several dissertations, thesis and assignments receiving acclaim and a good grade, Writekraft was officially founded in 2011 . Since its establishment, Writekraft Research & Publications LLP is Guiding and Mentoring PhD Scholars.
Our Mission
“To provide breakthrough research works to our clients through Perseverant efforts towards creativity and innovation”.
Vision
Writekraft endeavours to be the leading global research and publications company that will fulfil all research needs of our clients. We will achieve this vision through:
Analyzing every customer’s aims, objectives and purpose of research
Using advanced and latest tools and technique of research and analysis
Coordinating and including their own ideas and knowledge
Providing the desired inferences and results of the research
In the past decade, we have successfully assisted students from various universities in India and globally. We at Writekraft Research & Publications LLP head office in Kanpur, India are most trusted and professional Research, Writing, Guidance and Publication Service Provider for PhD. Our services meet all your PhD Admissions, Thesis Preparation and Research Paper Publication needs with highest regards for the quality you prefer.
Writekraft Research and Publications LLP was initially formed, informally, in 2006 by a group of scholars to help fellow students. Gradually, with several dissertations, thesis and assignments receiving acclaim and a good grade, Writekraft was officially founded in 2011 . Since its establishment, Writekraft Research & Publications LLP is Guiding and Mentoring PhD Scholars.
Writekraft Research and Publications LLP was initially formed, informally, in 2006 by a group of scholars to help fellow students. Gradually, with several dissertations, thesis and assignments receiving acclaim and a good grade, Writekraft was officially founded in 2011 . Since its establishment, Writekraft Research & Publications LLP is Guiding and Mentoring PhD Scholars.
Our Mission
“To provide breakthrough research works to our clients through Perseverant efforts towards creativity and innovation”.
Vision
Writekraft endeavours to be the leading global research and publications company that will fulfil all research needs of our clients. We will achieve this vision through:
• Analyzing every customer’s aims, objectives and purpose of research
• Using advanced and latest tools and technique of research and analysis
• Coordinating and including their own ideas and knowledge
• Providing the desired inferences and results of the research
In the past decade, we have successfully assisted students from various universities in India and globally. We at Writekraft Research & Publications LLP head office in Kanpur, India are most trusted and professional Research, Writing, Guidance and Publication Service Provider for PhD. Our services meet all your PhD Admissions, Thesis Preparation and Research Paper Publication needs with highest regards for the quality you prefer.
Writekraft Research and Publications LLP was initially formed, informally, in 2006 by a group of scholars to help fellow students. Gradually, with several dissertations, thesis and assignments receiving acclaim and a good grade, Writekraft was officially founded in 2011 . Since its establishment, Writekraft Research & Publications LLP is Guiding and Mentoring PhD Scholars.
Writekraft Research & Publications LLP
(Regd. No. AAI-1261)
Mobile: 7753818181, 9838033084
Email: info@writekraft.com
Web: www.writekraft.com
Writekraft Research and Publications LLP was initially formed, informally, in 2006 by a group of scholars to help fellow students. Gradually, with several dissertations, thesis and assignments receiving acclaim and a good grade, Writekraft was officially founded in 2011 . Since its establishment, Writekraft Research & Publications LLP is Guiding and Mentoring PhD Scholars.
Our Mission
“To provide breakthrough research works to our clients through Perseverant efforts towards creativity and innovation”.
Vision
Writekraft endeavours to be the leading global research and publications company that will fulfil all research needs of our clients. We will achieve this vision through:
Analyzing every customer’s aims, objectives and purpose of research
Using advanced and latest tools and technique of research and analysis
Coordinating and including their own ideas and knowledge
Providing the desired inferences and results of the research
In the past decade, we have successfully assisted students from various universities in India and globally. We at Writekraft Research & Publications LLP head office in Kanpur, India are most trusted and professional Research, Writing, Guidance and Publication Service Provider for PhD. Our services meet all your PhD Admissions, Thesis Preparation and Research Paper Publication needs with highest regards for the quality you prefer.
Our Achievements
NATIONAL AWARD FOR BEST RESEARCH PROJECT (By Hon. President APJ Abdul Kalam)
GOLD MEDAL FOR RESEARCH ON DISABILITY (By Disabled’s Club of India)
NOMINATED FOR BEST MSME AWARDS 2017
5 STAR RATING ON GOOGLE
We have PhD experts from reputed institutions/ organizations like Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Indian Institute of Management (IIM) and many more apex education institutions in India. Our works are tailored and drafted as per your requirements and are totally unique.
From past years our core advisory members, research team assisted research scholars from various universities from all corners of world.
Similar to Pharmaceutical Mergers Acquisitions in the U.S (20)
This document outlines 10 top trends in the healthcare industry for 2022 according to research by Capgemini. The trends include: 1) COVID-19 fast-tracking digital health and remote care delivery; 2) A focus on patient-centric, personalized care and shoppable healthcare experiences; 3) Adopting a whole-patient approach and understanding social determinants of health; 4) Using real-time healthcare data and IoMT to improve medical management; 5) Increased involvement of non-traditional players like BigTech firms; 6) Modernization efforts and cloud adoption in the industry; 7) Prioritizing pricing transparency and shoppable healthcare; 8) Increased focus on data privacy and security; 9) Margin pressures triggering
A combination of factors − the pandemic, catastrophic weather events, evolving policyholder expectations, and insurers’ drive for operational efficiency and future relevance − are sparking P&C industry changes.
In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, the most strategic insurers are building resilient, crisis-proof enterprises poised to take advantage of emerging and future business opportunities. They are leveraging advanced data analytics and novel technologies to assure agility and achieve positive revenue and customer satisfaction outcomes. Competitive advantage will hinge on accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market. Therefore, win-win partnerships and embedded services with InsurTechs and other ecosystem players are critical.
Read Capgemini’s Top P&C Insurance Trends 2022 for a glimpse at the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers are undertaking to boost customer-centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future-readiness.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the commercial banking sector as they shift to technology high gear to boost client efficiency and battle a volatile, uncertain, competitive, and evolving landscape.
First, it was retail banking. Now, advanced technology is shifting to – and disrupting − the commercial banking space. Many commercial banks, known for paperwork, red tape, and branch dependency, were unprepared to support clients during their post-COVID-19 ramp-up. But now, the digital pivot to new mindsets, partnerships, and processes is in overdrive.
As commercial banks grapple with competition from FinTechs, BigTechs, and alternative lenders, their inability
to fulfill SME demands and pandemic after-shocks necessitates transformative process changes and a move
to experiential, sustainable, and inclusive banking models. We expect banks to strive to meet the demands
of corporate clients and SMEs by digitally transforming critical workflows and improving client experience.
Additionally, incremental process improvements in the middle and back-office that leverage intelligent
automation will keep the competition at bay because engaged clients are loyal.
Adopting newer methods to mine data and moving to as-a-Service models will prepare commercial banks
to flexibly respond to newcomers and find ways to co-exist through effective collaboration. The time has come for commercial banks to put transformation on the fast track as lending losses in wallet and market share could spill over to other functions!
How incumbents react and respond to 2022 trends could determine their relevancy and resiliency in the years ahead.
The Covid-19 pandemic necessitated the payments industry undergo a facelift, sparked by novel approaches from new-age players, fostered by industry consolidation, and customers’ demand for end-to-end experience. Crossing the threshold, the industry is entering a new era – Payments 4.X, where payments are embedded and invisible, and an enabling function to provide frictionless customer experience. As customers make a permanent shift to next-gen payment methods, Digital IDs are critical for a seamless payment experience. The B2B payments segment is witnessing rapid digitization. BigTechs, PayTechs, and industry newcomers are ready to jump in with newfangled solutions to help underserved small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs).
As incumbents struggle with profits, new-age firms are forging ahead to take the lead in the Payments 4.X era by riding the success of non-card products and services. The new era demands collaboration, platformification, and firms can unleash full market potential only by embracing API-based business models and open ecosystems. Data prowess and enhanced payment processing capabilities are inevitable to thrive ahead. The clock is ticking for banks and traditional payments firms because the competitive advantage is not guaranteed forever. As industry players seek economies of scale, consolidations loom, and non-banks explore new territories to threaten incumbents’ market share. While all these 2022 trends are at play, central bank digital currency (CBDC) is emerging globally and might open a new chapter in the current payments landscape.
As we slowly move out of the pandemic, financial services firms have learned the criticality of virtual engagement to business resilience. Wealth management firms will need capabilities to cater to new-age clients and deliver new-age services. This report aims to understand and analyze the top trends in the Wealth Management industry this year and beyond.
A year ago, our Top Trends in Wealth Management report emphasized how the pandemic sparked disruption and digital transformation and changing investor attitudes around Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance (ESG) products. As we begin 2022, many of those trends continue to hold as COVID-19’s wide-reaching effects continue to influence the wealth management industry.
As wealth management (WM) firms supercharge their digital transformation journeys, investments in cybersecurity and human-centered design are becoming critical to building superior digital client experience (CX). Another holdover trend − sustainable investing – is gaining mainstream attention and generating increasingly sophisticated client demands. Data and analytics capabilities will become ever more essential for ESG scoring and personalized customer engagement. As large financial services firms refocus on their wealth management business while new digital players make industry strides, competition is becoming historically intense. Not surprisingly, client experience is the new battleground.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the retail banking sector driven by the competition, digital transformation, and innovation led by retail banks exploring novel ways to create and retain value in evolving landscape.
COVID-19 caught banks off guard and shook legacy mindsets to the core. With 20/20 (2020) hindsight, firms are more aware, digitally resilient, and financially stable as they head into 2022. The trials of the past 18 months forced firms to shore up existing business and consider new models and revenue streams.
Customer-centricity remains at the top of most FS agendas and is a 2022 focal point. Banks will focus on achieving operational excellence as diligently as delivering superior CX. In 2022 and beyond, it will be paramount for FIs to explore and invest in new technologies to remain relevant and resilient.
Banking 4.X will arrive in full force in 2022 with platform-supported firms monetizing diverse ecosystem capabilities and aggressively harvesting data to create experiential customer journeys through intelligent and personalized engagements. The new era will compel future-focused banks to finally abandon legacy infrastructure and collaborate with third-party specialists to solidify their best-fit, long-term roles. Increasingly, open platforms will make banks invisible as banking becomes embedded into customer lifestyles. At the same time, banks will shed asset-heavy models and shift to the cloud for greater agility, speed to market, and faster innovation. The shift will act as a precursor to adopting new technologies on the horizon – 5G and Decentralized Finance.
The recent past was filled will extraordinary lessons for financial institutions. Now is the time to act on those learnings and move forward profitably.
While COVID-19 has sparked the demand for life insurance, it has also exposed the operating model vulnerabilities in distribution, servicing, and customer retention. In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, insurers need to enhance their capabilities around advanced data management and focus on seamless and secure data sharing to provide superior CX and hyper-personalized offerings. Accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market are vital to remaining competitive, and win-win partnerships with ecosystems are critical in the journey.
Read our Top Life Insurance Trends 2022 to explore the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers undertake to acquire competencies around customer centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future readiness.
Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021Capgemini
The Property & Casualty insurance landscape is evolving quickly with the changing risk landscape, entry of new players, and changing customer expectations. The ripple effects of COVID-19 on the P&C insurance industry and natural disasters such as forest fires have adversely impacted insurance firm books.
In this scenario, to ensure growth and future-readiness, the most strategic insurers strive to be ‘Inventive Insurers’ – assuming a customer-centric approach, deploying intelligent processes, practicing business resilience and go-to-market agility, and embracing an open ecosystem.
Read our Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adapting to remain competitive amidst the evolving business landscape and how they can explore new ways to enhance their profitability.
A combination of factors such as demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and desire to become operationally efficient were already spurring changes in the life insurance industry. Enter 2020 – the COVID-19 pandemic is having a significant impact on the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry is adapting to the new normal.
Furthermore, COVID-19 has acted as a catalyst, pushing life insurers to prioritize their efforts on improving customer centricity, developing go-to-market agility, making processes intelligent, building business resilience, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Life Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the changing market dynamics.
The uncertainty of 2020 is setting the global tone for the immediate future in the financial services industry. So it is no surprise banks are laser-focused on business resilience, emphasizing both financial and operational risks. The need to adapt quickly to new normal conditions through virtual customer engagement is clear.
Customer centricity continues to drive commercial banks’ solution designs. And, the pandemic compelled products that deliver immediate client value ‒ quick digital onboarding, seamless lending, and support for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The onus is now on banks to go to market more quickly, which requires the implementation of intelligent processes and integrating corporates’ enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems with banking workflows.
To achieve go-to-market agility, banks across the globe are investing in and collaborating with FinTechs. Many of these partnerships are focused on boosting digital lending and providing seamless support to anxious small-business clients in need of assurance.
With newfound impetus for FinTech collaboration, commercial banks have picked up their step on the path toward OpenX. COVID-19 made it evident that survival during turbulence is manageable through collaboration with ecosystem players.
Read our Top Trends in Commercial Banking 2021 report to explore the strategies banks are adapting to transform their businesses from a product-led, siloed model to an experiential and agile plan.
When we published the Top Trends in Wealth Management 2020, little did we foresee the pandemic that would sweep through the world and disrupt life as we knew it. Yet, when we reviewed last year’s trends, we found that many still hold and some have taken on even greater relevance. One such trend is sustainable investing, which had begun to gain prominence as investors became more aware of ESG considerations, and firms rolled out more sustainable investing offerings. Another trend that has accelerated in the post-COVID world is the importance of investing in omnichannel capabilities and technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance personalization and advisor effectiveness. The pandemic has driven wealth management firms to accelerate their digital transformation journey, with some immediate focus areas being interactive client communications and digital advisor tools.
There is no denying that time is of the essence. Yes, budgets are tight, but the Open X ecosystem offers wealth management firms opportunities to reimagine their operating models and deliver excellent customer experience cost-effectively.
Top trends in Payments: 2020 highlighted the payments industry’s flux driven by new trends in technology adoption, innovative solutions, and changing consumer behavior. The pandemic has tested the digital mastery of players, who are already grappling with transition. Non-cash transactions are on a robust growth path, accelerated by increased adoption during COVID-19. Regulators are working to instill trust and address non-cash payments risk amid unparalleled growth as players collaborate to quell uncertainty. Regional initiatives, such as the P27 (Nordics real-time payments system) and the EPI (European Payments Initiative), are gaining traction in response to country-level fragmentation and competition.
Investment in emerging technologies is looked upon as an elixir to mitigate fraud, data-driven offerings are being considered for providing value-added propositions, and distributed ledger technology is in focus for digital currency solutions, efficiency enhancement, and cost gains. New players, such as retailers/merchants, are integrating payments into their value chains while technology giants are upscaling their financial services game by weaving offerings around payments as a center stage. Constrained by budgets, firms consider business models such as Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) to provide cost-effective and superior customer experience.
A combination of factors, including demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and regulatory and compliance mandates, were already spurring change in the health insurance industry. Enter 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic, which is having sweeping implications for the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry adapts to the new normal.
Furthermore, some changes are here to stay, and it will be prudent for the industry players to be resilient to the market shifts by being agile, improving member centricity, making processes intelligent, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Health Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the external pressures.
The banking industry’s resilience is being tested as banks navigate through a remarkable 2020 filled with uncertainties. The impact of COVID-19 has been about setting the tone for future operational models. Retail banks have shifted focus towards integrated risk management with a more holistic view of operational risks. Adapting to the new normal, banks have prioritized cost transformation while engaging customers virtually. Incumbents sought to be more responsible within fast-changing environmental conditions and ESG remained a critical focus.
To provide more experiential services, banks are leveraging techniques such as segment-of-one to hyper-personalize offerings while aiming to humanize digital channels for increased engagement. Banks are also revamping middle and back offices, going beyond the front end leveraging intelligent processes. Open X is enabling banks to play on their strengths and use the expertise of ecosystem players. Going forward, banks are poised to become an enhanced one-stop shop by providing consumers value-adding FS and non-FS experiences.
To acquire customers in cost-effective manner, retail banks are tapping value-based propositions ‒ such as POS financing and mortgage refinancing. Further, Banking-as-Service provides incumbents a way to provide their high-value offerings to other players. In preparation for the future, banks will be looking to improve their go-to-market agility by leveraging the benefits of cloud. This analysis outlines the top 10 trends in retail banking for 2021.
Explore how Capgemini’s Connected autonomous planning fine-tunes Consumer Products Company’s operations for manufacturing, transport, procurement, and virtually every other aspect of the supply-value network in a touchless, autonomous way.
Financial services is undergoing a paradigm shift that is forcing incumbent retail banks to rethink growth strategies as they struggle to remain relevant. Growing competition from BigTechs, FinTech firms, and challenger banks has added to the complexity created by increasingly stringent regulatory and compliance requirements. Customers now expect a seamless customer journey and personalized offerings because they have become accustomed to top-notch individualized service from GAFA giants Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon. The changing ecosystem offers established banks new, unexplored opportunities and encourages a transition beyond traditional products to meet the exacting requirements of today’s customers. Bank collaboration with FinTech and RegTech partners is becoming commonplace. Incumbents are exploring point-of-sale financing and unsecured consumer lending, while they also boost their digital channel competencies to reach a broader customer base. Banks are beginning to accept open APIs and are working with third-party specialists to create an open shared marketplace. Technological advancements such as AI are fueling efforts to evolve customer onboarding and touchpoint processes. Increasingly, banks are turning to design thinking methodology to understand the customer journey, extract deep insights, and develop a more refined user experience across the customer lifecycle.
Our analysis of the top retail banking trends for 2020 offers a glimpse into the fast-changing banking ecosystem and explores the tools and solutions being used to face new-age challenges.
Aspects of the life insurance industry have remained constant for years – and so have premiums. Traditional savings products have taken a huge hit in terms of attractiveness because low interest-rates prevail. Meanwhile, the risk landscape is shifting, and insurers need to align better with the emerging business environment, manage changing customer preferences, and improve operational efficiencies. Within today’s scenario, industry players are undertaking tactical and strategic shifts in attempts to manage unpredictable market dynamics. Insurers must develop alternative products to breathe new life into policies and leverage emerging technologies (artificial intelligence (AI), analytics, and blockchain) to improve efficiency, agility, flexibility, and customer-centricity.
Read Top Trends in Life Insurance: 2020 for a look at the innovative steps future-focused insurers are considering to meet industry challenges and opportunities.
The health insurance industry is evolving and undergoing significant changes. As the risk landscape shifts, insurers are working to improve operational efficiencies, meet evolving customer preferences, and align better with the changing business environment. Accordingly, payers must adapt and align business models and offerings. An incisive tactical approach is required to accommodate members’ needs and related emerging risks — medical, health, and environmental. Advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence, analytics, automation, and connected devices are enabling insurers to manage these changes proactively, partner with members, and help to prevent risks, all the while continuing to fulfill payer responsibilities.
Read Top Trends in Health Insurance: 2020 to learn which strategies insurers are adopting to navigate and align with today’s challenges.
Similar to other financial services domains, payments is evolving into an open ecosystem. The EU’s Payment Services Directive (PSD2) pioneered open banking by encouraging banks and established payments players to securely open the systems to foster competition, innovation, and more customer choices. In tandem with non-cash transaction growth, regulations are driving banks and payments firms to expand their array of payment methods and channels. Governments are encouraging financial inclusion by also promoting the adoption of non-cash payments. Increasingly, merchants and corporates seek to offer alternative payment systems because of widespread popularity among consumers. Alternative payments also enable merchants to provide real-time and cross-border payments to boost business efficiency.
Banks, payment firms, card firms, BigTechs, FinTechs, and other players are continuously developing new technology to cash in on market changes. However, data breaches and fraud continue to hinder innovation as firms devote countless resources each year to address security issues. Many governments are also designing new regulations to reduce ecosystem threats. All these measures are expected to make the current ecosystem much more secure and simple for players as well as customers.
Top Trends in Payments: 2020 explores and analyzes payments ecosystem initiatives and solutions for this year and beyond
Statistics from Finland, provided by the Contact Point for Cross-Border Health Care in Finland and Kela (the Social Insurance Institution of Finland) include information on cross-border healthcare, European Health Insurance Card (EHIC), medical care costs incured abroad and their reimbursements, and prior authorisations for seeking treatment abroad.
Must-Have Baby Products for New Parents.pdfCuddables
Are you looking for safe & secure baby wipes, Cuddables is here for you. Our wipes are dermatologist approved which makes it no.1 choice of parents. Get rid of unexpected spit-ups and spill-ups anytime. Order now and get buy 1 and get 1 free.-https://www.cuddables.in/products/baby-wipes
When Decision-Making Is Imperative: Advance Care Planning for Busy Practice S...VITASAuthor
Complex, chronically ill patients present an opportunity to discuss and implement hospice and palliative care. Many elderly patients who present to the ED and other busy practice settings are hospice-eligible because of functional decline and multi-morbidity. Key tools can quickly facilitate goals-of-care (GOC) conversations, advance care planning, and hospice referrals amid time constraints and high-acuity challenges.
NATURAL, COLORFUL, YUMMY COSMETICS BRAND FOR YOUR BEAUTYzcodebro
Organic Mimi is a real treat for skin and hair care. A healthy and pleasant pampering experience when you want to indulge yourself with organic natural ingredients for skin beauty and delicious fragrances for cheerful mi-mi mood. Our products are "no-fuss": pure formulations and simple application ensure your skin's basic needs for hydration, nourishment and protection are covered. Fun packaging, reminiscent of ice-cream cups, and mimi-aromatherapy turn your everyday skincare routine into a genuine beauty ritual causing beauty addiction
Pancreatitis occurs when a patient experiences elevated levels of enzymes in the pancreas. The American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy defines pancreatitis after ERCP as a threefold increase in pancreatic enzymes. This increase is present for more than 24 hours after the procedure.
I kindly take my opportunity to express my sincere expression of gratitude to each and every one who helped me the completion of this work.
I am writing to express my sincere gratitude for the incredible internship experience I had at CAMRI Multispecialty Hospital. It has been an enriching and invaluable journey, and I want to extend my appreciation to the entire team.
My internship experience at CAMRI Multispecialty Hospital through the Internship program facilitated by Burdwan Institute of Modern Studies (BIMS) under Maulana Abul Kalam Azad University of Technology, West Bengal has been instrumental in enhancing my understanding of the healthcare Industry and refining my skills in hospital management.
Brief description of CAMRI hospital as an intern in operations department and here will discuss the admission procedure in the organization.
During my hospital management internship training, I had the invaluable opportunity to gain firsthand insights into the management of the emergency department. This summary encapsulates the essence of my experiences and learning from studying the Emergency Department environment. By focusing on optimizing workflow, resource utilization, and patient experience, this presentation seeks to elevate the performance of the Emergency Department and ultimately enhance the overall healthcare delivery at CAMRI Hospital.
Throughout my traning period in CAMRI Hospital, I have learnt emergency managing and auditing. I have check every registers, whether all the documents were properly arranged according to the NABH guidelines or not. I also learned different diagnosis names, how much the estimated treatment package might be by talking to the patient's relatives, the names of different investigation tests, whether tests were done A good ED is equipped with monitors, point-of-care diagnostics, essential drugs, and other equipment needed for high-quality medical care to the patient. ED works in close association with other departments like radiology, laboratory, blood bank, etc.
My overall experience has been a very fruitful one. It was a good learning experience for me and gave me the first exposure to gain knowledge about the working of the hospital industry.
Solution Manual For Fundamentals of Financial Accounting, 8th Edition 2024 by...rightmanforbloodline
Solution Manual For Fundamentals of Financial Accounting, 8th Edition 2024 by Fred Phillips.pdf
Solution Manual For Fundamentals of Financial Accounting, 8th Edition 2024 by Fred Phillips.pdf
The Best Population Health Management Solutions – Bluestar (2).pptxBluestartelehealth
Are you looking for population health management solutions? Bluestar telehealth offers the best services to support populations & improve outcomes. Learn more!
AI presentation Practical Tips for doctors Mohali Jul 2024.pptxGaurav Gupta
Introduction:
- The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming healthcare
- Doctors must adapt to integrate AI tools effectively into their practice
- This presentation provides practical tips for leveraging AI to enhance patient care
1. Understanding AI in Medicine:
- Types of AI: Machine learning, deep learning, natural language processing
- Key applications: Diagnosis, treatment planning, imaging analysis, drug discovery
- Limitations: Data quality issues, bias, lack of contextual understanding
2. AI-Assisted Diagnosis:
- Using AI tools to analyze patient data and suggest potential diagnoses
- Combining AI insights with clinical expertise for more accurate diagnoses
- Case studies: AI in radiology, pathology, and rare disease identification
3. Treatment Planning with AI:
- AI-powered clinical decision support systems
- Personalized treatment recommendations based on patient data and medical literature
- Monitoring treatment efficacy and adjusting plans in real-time
4. AI in Medical Imaging:
- AI-enhanced image analysis for faster and more accurate interpretations
- Automated detection of abnormalities in X-rays, MRIs, and CT scans
- Reducing radiologist workload and improving early detection of diseases
5. Staying Updated with AI Advancements:
- Continuous learning through online courses and workshops
- Participating in AI-focused medical conferences
- Collaborating with AI researchers and developers
6. Patient Communication:
- Explaining AI's role in diagnosis and treatment to patients
- Addressing patient concerns about AI in healthcare
- Using AI to enhance patient education and engagement
7. Future Trends:
- AI in precision medicine and genomics
- Wearable devices and AI for remote patient monitoring
- AI-powered virtual health assistants and chatbots
8. Overcoming Implementation Challenges:
- Addressing resistance to change within medical teams
- Managing the learning curve for new AI technologies
- Ensuring interoperability with existing systems
Conclusion:
- AI is a powerful tool to augment, not replace, medical professionals
- Embracing AI can lead to improved patient outcomes and more efficient healthcare delivery
- Doctors must actively engage with AI to shape its development and application in medicine
Key Takeaways:
1. Familiarize yourself with AI capabilities and limitations in healthcare
2. Integrate AI tools gradually into your clinical workflow
3. Use AI to enhance decision-making, not as a substitute for clinical judgment
4. Stay informed about AI advancements and ethical considerations
5. Communicate clearly with patients about AI's role in their care
By following these practical tips, doctors can effectively leverage AI to improve patient care, streamline workflows, and stay at the forefront of medical innovation. As AI continues to evolve, it's crucial for medical professionals to adapt and harness its potential to transform healthcare delivery.
Intensive In-Home Services in Virginia: Supporting Families in Their Homesinfo513572
Discover United Community Solution's Intensive In-Home Services: comprehensive support, therapy, and crisis intervention for families to strengthen relationships and enhance coping skills. Read more: https://unitedcommunitysolution.com/service/intensive-in-home-services/
We Care About Your Pets At Abdullahblogs.comAbdullahblogs
At Abdullahblogs.com You can Know Better About Your Dog Health We Care for Your Pets We strongly Care About Your Pets.
Caring for dogs involves a combination of essential practices to ensure their health, happiness, and overall well-being. Here’s a comprehensive guide on how to care for your canine companion:
1. **Nutrition**: Provide a balanced diet suitable for your dog’s age, size, and activity level. High-quality commercial dog food or a vet-approved homemade diet should include protein, carbohydrates, fats, vitamins, and minerals. Ensure access to fresh water at all times.
2. **Exercise**: Regular physical activity is crucial for a dog’s physical and mental health. The amount and type of exercise vary by breed and age, but daily walks, playtime, and interactive activities like fetch or agility training are beneficial.
3. **Grooming**: Regular grooming helps maintain your dog’s coat, skin, and overall hygiene. Brushing, bathing (as needed), nail trimming and dental care (brushing teeth regularly) are essential. Long-haired breeds may require more frequent grooming.
4. **Veterinary Care**: Schedule regular check-ups with a veterinarian for vaccinations, parasite control (fleas, ticks, worms), and overall health assessments. Early detection of health issues can prolong your dog’s life and reduce treatment costs.
5. **Training and Socialization**: Basic obedience training (sit, stay, come) improves behavior and strengthens the bond between you and your dog. Socialization with other dogs and people from an early age helps prevent behavioral problems.
6. **Safe Environment**: Create a safe and comfortable living environment for your dog. Provide a cozy bed or crate, access to shelter from extreme weather conditions, and secure, hazard-free outdoor areas. Be cautious of toxic substances, plants, and foods harmful to
dogs.
7. **Love and Attention**: Dogs thrive on companionship and affection. Spend quality time with your dog, offering praise, cuddles, and interactive play. Mental stimulation through toys, puzzles, and new experiences keeps them engaged and happy.
8. **Monitoring Health**: Watch for signs of illness or discomfort such as changes in appetite, energy levels, or bathroom habits. Promptly address any concerns by consulting your veterinarian.
9. **Responsible Ownership**: Adhere to local regulations regarding dog ownership, including licensing and identification (microchipping). Respect others by preventing excessive barking and picking up after your dog in public spaces.
10. **Emergency Preparedness**: Have a plan in case of emergencies, including natural disasters or sudden health crises. Keep a first aid kit for pets and know where the nearest emergency veterinary clinic is located.
By following these guidelines, you can ensure that your dog lives a happy, healthy life as a cherished member of your family.
1. the way we do itHeader-solution
Pharmaceutical Mergers and
Acquisitions in the U.S.
Analyzing the correlation between new drug approvals and M&A activity
2015
2. 2 Pharmaceutical Mergers and Acquisitions in the U.S.
Key Findings
• Since 2014, the pharmaceutical industry
has seen a wave of larger M&A deals
driven by opportunities for revenue
growth, cost synergies, tax inversion, and
cash utilization
• While megadeals (deals greater than
$5bn) have inflated deal value, the deal
volume has been driven by smaller,
product-focused acquisitions
• Over the past decade, there has been
an increase in the valuation multiples
that pharmaceutical and biotechnology
companies have received
• New drug approval is an acquisition trigger;
approximately one third of small and mid-
sized pharmaceutical firms (companies
with less than $15bn in 2014 revenues) that
received approval from Food and Drug
Administration for a new product were
acquired; 90% of these product-driven
acquisitions happened within six months of
FDA approval
U.S. Pharma M&A
Activity Overview
Since 2010, approximately 200 pharmaceutical
and biotech deals have taken place per year in
the United States. In 2014, only 182 major
deals took place, lower than average (~190).
However, 2014 surpassed the combined value
of deals from 2011-2013 ($178bn) and saw
over $200bn in mergers and acquisitions, a
300% increase from the previous year.
2014 saw several of the largest deals in the
pharmaceutical industry to date, including the
$66bn purchase of Allergan by Actavis, Merck
unloading its consumer health unit to Bayer,
GSK and Novartis’ multibillion-dollar asset
swap, as well as Novartis’s animal health unit
sale to Eli Lilly.
2015 will likely be an even bigger year for
pharmaceutical deals. Companies are
constantly looking for opportunities to bolster
portfolios and increase shareholder value. Over
$150bn of merger and acquisition activity was
recorded by U.S. pharmaceutical industry
through August 2015, and this figure will likely
exceed $220bn by year-end.
There has also been a shift in deal value from
2013 to 2014. The average deal size in 2013
was approximately $40m, while the average
deal size in 2014 was over $1bn, underscoring
industry’s appetite for larger deals.
Figure 1: Size and number of deals by U.S. pharmaceutical and biotech companies since 2007
Source: FiercePharma, EvaluatePharma, Capgemini Analysis
$70
$109
$152
$109
$56
$43
$79
$212
$151
$73
170
188
171
194
197
192 193
182
100
125
150
175
200
225
0
50
100
150
200
250
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
DealCount
DealValue($Bn)
Year
M&A Activity in Pharma and Biotech
Deal Value Projected Deal Count
2014 surpassed the
combined total for
deals from 2011-
2013 and saw
over $200bn in
pharma mergers and
acquisitions, a 300%
increase from the
previous year’’
3. 3
Factors Driving
Acquisitions
The size of recent deals disguises the true
characteristics of pharmaceutical mergers
and acquisitions activity. Although major
acquisitions outweigh other deals by value,
over 90% of deals were relatively small in size
(less than $5bn) (see Figure 2). The difference
in deal value appears to be driven by different
motives. For megadeals, motivations from
large pharmaceutical companies, such as
top-line increases, cost synergies, tax
inversion or cash utilization, frequently came
into play. In contrast, the smaller deals tended
to be much more focused, with target
companies offering different sources of value
to the acquirer, such as research or portfolio
expertise, a breakthrough pipeline drug, or a
recent drug approval.
A closer look at recent drug approvals reveals
an interesting correlation with acquisitions of
small and mid-sized companies. Of the 105
drugs approved in the U.S. since January
2014, 58% were filed by companies with less
that $15bn in 2014 revenues (see Figure 3). Of
the 16 large companies (with 2014 revenues
greater than $15bn) that had one or more
new drug approvals in the past 20 months,
none were acquired within the same period.
In comparison, 26% of small to mid-sized
pharmaceutical companies with new drug
approvals were acquired within that time
period. The fact that the small and mid-sized
companies acquired since January 2014
typically had no more than a few approved
products supports the observation that the
motivations behind large deals are very
different than those behind smaller deals.
So what makes a particular small to mid-
sized pharmaceutical company attractive
to potential acquirers? Following factors
have been resonant themes across
recent acquisitions:
• New drug approval with promising
estimated peak sales
• Special FDA status for existing or pipeline
products (breakthrough therapy, fast track
review, orphan drug designation, priority
review)
• Proven R&D leadership in a specific
technology or therapeutic area
• Relatively small market capitalization
Figure 2: U.S. pharmaceutical and biotech deals by value and count since January 2014
Source: FiercePharma, CrunchBase, EvaluatePharma, Capgemini Analysis
89%
11%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Megadeals
($5 bn+)
Other Deals
(< $5 bn)
Deal Value
6%
94%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Megadeals
($5 bn+)
Other Deals
(< $5 bn)
# of Deals
26% of small to mid-
sized pharmaceutical
companies with new
drug approvals were
acquired in past 20
months’’
4. 4 Pharmaceutical Mergers and Acquisitions in the U.S.
Figure 3: New drug approvals by FDA since January 2014 across companies
Source: FDA, Capgemini Analysis
New Drug Approval as
an Acquisition Trigger
Any acquisition is a result of various
interrelated factors. Failure of bigger
pharmaceutical companies to consistently
develop new drugs and pressure from
shareholders to deliver returns have forced
large pharmaceutical companies to look
outside for innovative drugs. This has resulted
in new drug approvals emerging as a major
trigger for acquisitions. Capgemini Consulting
collected the data for all the new drug
approvals from January 2014 through August
2015 to analyze the correlation between new
drug approvals and acquisitions. Companies
that received the approvals were segmented
into large, mid-size and small based upon
their 2014 revenues (large >=$15bn, $15bn <
mid <$5bn, small <=$5bn).
Since there were no acquisitions in the large
segment over last 20 months, the analysis
focuses on the small to mid-sized
pharmaceutical companies. Figure 4 shows
the correlation between small to mid-sized
pharmaceutical companies, that were
acquired in last 20 months with the new
drug approvals.
As seen in Figure 4, all companies, with the
exception of Chelsea Therapeutics, were
acquired within six-months of obtaining FDA
approval. Excluding Forest Laboratories, in
cases where a company was acquired prior to
drug approval [denoted by (-)], the period
between approval and acquisition was less
than six months, meaning that the drug was
under FDA review when the deal was finalized.
Not surprisingly, in the two cases (Zerbaxa and
Natpara) where the drug was expected to be a
blockbuster, the company was acquired within
days of receiving FDA approval.
Of the small and mid-sized companies with
new drug approvals that have not yet been
acquired, four have already been predicted by
Wall Street as the next probable targets.
Furthermore, some of the companies with
new drug approval possess certain
characteristics that make them unattractive
acquisition targets. Some companies, such
as Mannkind and Pharming Group, have
strategically established relationships with Big
Pharmaceutical companies that deter other
companies from attempting an acquisition.
Others, such as Knight Therapeutics and The
Medicines Company, have opted to increase
their market capitalization through
Most small to mid-
sized pharmaceutical
companies that
received new drug
approval from FDA
were acquired within
six months.’’
42%
13%
45%
Recent Drug Approvals (since January 2014)
Large Pharma (2014
Revenue > = $15bn)
Mid-Sized Pharma
Small Pharma companies
(2014 Revenue < = $5bn)
5. 5
Figure 4: Relationship between new drug approval and acquisition for small- and mid-sized pharmaceuticals since
January 2014
acquisitions of their own. The remaining few
are too small to be attractive acquisitions (i.e.
single product companies with less than
$100mm projected peak sales).
Hence, any small to mid-sized pharmaceutical
company nearing a product approval from
FDA should consider potential acquisition as a
risk and take necessary steps to prepare for it.
Source: Capgemini Analysis
2014
Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb March April May June July Aug
2015
FDA Approval Date
Acquisition Date
Product (Acquired / Buyer)
$100-
200M
$200-
300M
$300-
400M
$400-
500M
>$1B$500M-
1B
Estimated Peak Product Sales
Time Elapsed Between New Drug Approvals
and Acquisitions
Legend
Northera
(Chelsea Thpts / Lundbeck)
Sivextro
(Cubist / Merck)
Zerbaxa
(Cubist / Merck)
Cholmbam
(Asklepion / Retrophin)
Esbriet
(InterMune / Roche)
Natpara
(NPS / Shire)
Addyi
(Sprout / Valeant)
Kybella
(Kythera Biopharma / Allergan)
Dalvance
(Durata Therpeutics / Actavis)
(-)3 mths
Soolantra
(Galderma / Nestle)
(-) 5 mths
(+) 6 mths
(+) 15 mths
(-) 3 mths
(+) 5 mths
(-) 2 mths
Namzaric
(Forest Laboratories / Actavis)
Imbruvica
(Pharmacyclics / Abbvie)
Xifaxan
(Salix Pharmaceutical / Valeant)
(-)2 mths
(+) 6 mths
(-)10 mths
6. 6 Pharmaceutical Mergers and Acquisitions in the U.S.
Figure 5: Median EBITDA multiple paid to acquire pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, 2007-2015
Source: Bloomberg, Capgemini Analysis
Valuation
One of the first steps that a pharmaceutical
company can take to be better prepared for a
potential acquisition is to have an estimate of
their own valuation. Over the past decade,
there has been an increase in acquisition
prices for pharmaceutical and biotechnology
companies. Acquisition prices in 2015 are
highest relative to EBITA and revenue in last
20 years. Also market is eager to invest and
pay rich multiples for potential high payout
that exists.
The valuation process for pharmaceutical and
biotechnology companies presents a
challenge, as products in the early stages of
development have no product revenue on
which to base a valuation. Nevertheless,
valuations are continuously being performed
and adjusted, using available data, while also
being influenced by investor speculations
regarding the value of a particular company
or pipeline product. Due to lack of
transparency in the process, it is not rare to
find instances where pharmaceutical and
biotechnology companies sell promising
products, based on very low valuations, and
these products later, and sometimes very
quickly, become significantly more valuable.
Examples of these errors in valuation span
across disease areas, and include such
products as Zytiga, a drug that treats
prostrate cancer in men which became a
$2bn drug (sold by BTG for ~$6mm a year
royalty), and Cubicin, used to treat bacterial
infection with annual sales of over $1bn (sold
by Eli Lilly for less than $50mm).
These challenges are more pronounced in
valuing orphan drugs. Orphan drugs have
small patient population coupled with the
attractive pricing structure of the market.
This magnifies the errors in valuation process
leading to variance that can completely skew
the numbers.
Given the high degree of uncertainty and
reliance on assumptions that exist in
valuations for pharmaceutical and
biotechnology companies, as well as the
increase in deal value, it is becoming
increasingly important for these companies to
select their partners carefully, so as to ensure
that these valuations incorporate all relevant
information.
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
MedianEBITDAMultiple(x)
Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology Median
Acquisition Multiples
Pharmaceutical
multiples have
steadily increased
over past 20 years’’
It is important for
pharmaceutical
companies to
select their valuation
partners carefully’’
7. 7
Implications
What are the implications for small to
mid-sized companies that are in the process
of developing and launching new drugs?
There are a few steps that the potential target
company can take to be better prepared for
such a scenario. These are:
• Remain informed of current market
focus and incentives for mergers and
acquisitions, specifically related to types of
products and portfolios
• Estimate their global valuation, including
value of both the lead product as well as
the pipeline
• While performing valuations, select
partners carefully so as to ensure that
all relevant information is appropriately
captured
• Get a better understanding of the
corporate law of their home country as well
as that of the U.S.
• Review their ownership structure and have
a plan ready to respond to any unsolicited
third-party interest
• Develop relationships with key investors
to ensure their ongoing commitment and
understand relevant motivations
• In the case that the company is open
to a merger or acquisition, they should
proactively identify potential companies
that might be a good strategic fit
• Identify acquisition targets of their own
to increase market capitalization and
deter acquisition
References
1. “2014 FDA Approved Drugs” CenterWatch. Accessed September 2, 2015 2. Acquisition details from BioSpace. Accessed
September 2, 2015 3. Company profiles from CrunchBase. Accessed September 2, 2015 4. Gardner, J. & Urquhart, L. (2015) “Pharma
and Biotech Half-Year Review”. Evaluate Ltd., Accessed September 2, 2015 5. Helfand, C. & Palmer, E. (2015) “Pharma’s top 10 M&A
deals of 2014”. FiercePharma. Accessed September 2, 2015 6. Helfand, C. & Palmer, E. (2014) “Pharma’s top 10 M&A deals of 2014’s
first half”. FiercePharma. Accessed September 2, 2015 7. Lachapelle, Tara (2015) “Drug Takeover Valuations Soar as Par Pharma
Gains 300%”. Bloomberg data. Accessed September 20, 2015 8. Jarvis, L.M. (2015) “The Year in New Drugs”. Chemical & Engineering
News, 93(5): 11-16 9. “Orphan Drug Report” EvaluatePharma, 2014