NOVARTIS SNAPS UP STAKE IN ROCHE - ACS Publications

Novartis has bought 20% of Roche's voting shares from Swiss gadfly investor Martin Ebner for approximately $2.8 billion. The purchase makes Novartis t...
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NEWS OF THE WEEK BUSINESS

NOVARTIS SNAPS UP STAKE IN ROCHE

Roche

Strategic investment now of $2.8 billion may pay off big in the future

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ITH ONE ELEGANT MOVE,

Swiss pharmaceuticals company Novartis has begun what will almost certainly lead, eventually, to a full takeover of its crosstown rival Roche Holding AG, parent of Hoff­ mann-La Roche. Novartis has bought 2 0 % of Roche's voting shares from Swiss gadfly investor Martin Ebner for approximately S2.8 billion. The purchase makes Novartis the sec­ ond-largest holder of Roche shares, after the 50.1% block held by the Hoffmann and Oeri-Hoffmann families. Ebner, who had

VASELLA

been trying to win a seat on the Roche board in a bid to restruc­ ture the company, finally lost patience and sold out. Securities analysts say Novar­ tis Chairman and Chief Execu­ tive Officer Daniel Vasella is determined not to enter a hos­ tile-bid situation for Roche. Instead, Vasella says, he is open to discussions with Roche exec­ utives and the family and would like to pursue collaborative proj­ ects. The buy is, he says, "a longterm financial investment, which is also strategic in nature. We believe that we were the most log-

ENVIRONMENT

FORD SETS C02 REDUCTIONS Company announces its greenhouse gas emissions, outlines plan to cut them

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N MAY 3, FORD MOTOR CO.

became the first large automaker to report how much C 0 2 its vehicles and man­ ufacturing facilities contribute to

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global greenhouse gas emissions. Each year, Ford says, it releases 400 million metric tons of C 0 2 equivalent to the atmosphere. Its plants emit only 12 million met­ ric tons, and its vehicles emit 388 million metric tons. Global emis­ sions from all sources total 22,561 million metric tons. Ford has been criticized by environmental groups for con­ tinuing to promote gas-guzzling sport-utility vehicles (SUVs), while at the same time profess­ ing concern about global climate change. But over the past year, Ford has taken steps to reduce C 0 2 emis­

ical buyer of the Roche share package offered by Ebner." Vasella's strategy seems to be a gentle hemming in of Roche and its options. Roche now will find it difficult to make any major acqui­ sition or merger deals without the support of Novartis, which, effec­ tively, could block any such move. Novartis, itself the product of the 1996 merger of Sandoz and Ciba-Geigy, has been performing well as an investment holding and is thought to have a much stronger pipeline than Roche. Together, the two companies would have combined pharma­ ceutical sales of approximately $20 billion per year. Novartis' pharmaceuticals sales in 2 0 0 0 were $11.58 billion, and those of Roche were $10.47 billion. The two combined would join the superleague of pharmaceuticals giants now occupied by Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, with sales of $20 billion or more per year. -PATRICIA SHORT

sions, the report points out. It plans to have a hybrid-electric SUV for sale in 2 0 0 3 and to improve the fuel economy of its SUV fleet 2 5 % by 2 0 0 5 . In Europe, it has voluntarily agreed to reduce C 0 2 emissions from its new vehicle fleet 25% from 1995 levels by 2008. Ford also plans to have a test fleet of fuel-cell vehi­ cles on the road by the end of next year. "Fuel cells could be the pre­ dominant power source in 25 years," replacing the internal combustion engine, said com­ pany Chairman Bill Ford at a con­ ference run by Greenpeace in early May "There is now more than enough evidence to warrant an immediate and considered re­ sponse" to concerns about cli­ mate change, Ford said. But he stressed that, in contrast to gov­ ernment action, "market- and competition-driven change is the best hope for moving quickly and effectively to address the is­ sue."—BETTE HILEMAN HTTP://PUBS.AC5.ORG/CEN