
In the November 2005
issue:
JNJ Cuts Offer By 15 Percent, Will Buy
Guidant For $21.5 Billion
Johnson & Johnson is now offering to buy device maker Guidant for $21.5
billion, replacing its December 2004 offer of $25.4 billion. Read inside
for some ideas on what the $4 billion difference between the two
represents.
...
November’s Deals
The month of November saw a total of 65 deals in the health care industry.
A total of $5.1 billion was spent to fund them. While one billion-dollar
deal was announced this month, another, announced in July, was withdrawn.
...
In The Departments
Services
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Health Care Services
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Deal Summaries
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Additional Transactions
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Transaction Updates
Technology
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Health Care Technology
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Deal Summaries
Additional Transactions
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Transaction Updates
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Articles Archive
Companies Mentioned in this issue:
November 2005
3i Group Plc p13
A
Abbott Laboratories p11
Actavis p12
Advanced Neuromodulation Systems p2
Allergan p12
Alpharma p12
Altana AG p13
Amedisys p2
American Teleradiology Nighthawks p4
Amide Pharmaceutical p12
Analogics p12
Apax Partners p4
Arcadia Resources p2
B
Banc of America Securities LLC p12
Barr Laboratories p12
Barrington Associates p2
Barrow Community Hospital p3
Bayer AG p13
Bayer Healthcare p13
betapharm Arzneimittel GmbH p13
Biogen Idec p11
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Oklahoma p9
Boston Private Value p11
C
Camtronics Medical Systems p12
Centeno Clinic p9
Chiron Corp. p13
Commonwealth Communities p4
Compex Technologies p12
Conceptis Technologies p12
D
Davidson County Health Department p2
DOR BioPharma p11
Duramed Pharmaceuticals p12
E
Emageon p12
Encore Medical Corp. p12
Endo Pharmaceuticals Holding p13
Essent Healthcare p3
Evanston Northwestern Healthcare p3
F
FEI Women’s Health p12
Fidelity Investments p9
First Albany Capital p12
Fountain View p4
Fremont Ambulatory Surgicenter p9
G
Gastrotech Pharma p12
Georgetown Healthcare System p3
GlaxoSmithKline p11
Goldman Sachs p2
Greene Holcomb & Fisher LLC p12
Guidant Corporation p1
Gulf Coast Medical Center p2
H
Hawaii Health Systems Corp. p3
HCA p3
Health Care REIT p4
Health Care Services Corporation p9
Health Management Associates p3
Highland Park Hospital p3
Home Pharmacy of California p2
I
IMS Health p9
Inamed p12
J
Johnson & Johnson p1
K
Kindred Healthcare Services p4
King Pharmaceuticals p12
M
M-Plan, Inc. p9
Magellan Health p4
Malulani Health Systems p3
Marcus & Millichap p9
Maui Memorial Medical Center p3
Medical Mutual of Ohio p9
Medical Park Hospital p2
Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. p12
Merrill Gardens p4
Moody’s Investors Service p3
Moses Cone Health System p4
N
Newnan Hospital p3
Nicholas Piramal p13
Nighthawk Radiology p4
NovaMed p9
Novartis p11
O
O2 Plus p2
Onex Corp. p4
Orlando Regional Healthcare p3
Orlando Regional St. Cloud Healthcare p3
Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical p13
P
Pain Therapeutics p12
PainCare Holdings p9
Pampa Regional Medical Center p2
Petersen Health Care p9
Pfizer p11
Piedmont Healthcare p3
Piper Jaffray p12
Province Healthcare p2
R
Ranbaxy p13
Rigel Pharmaceuticals p11
S
Sandoz p13
Sanofi-Aventis p11
Senior Living Properties of Indiana p9
Serono SA p11
Seton Healthcare Network p3
Signature Healthcare, LLC p2
Skilled Healthcare Group p4
SkyePharma PLC p13
Smith/Packett Med-Com p9
Spectrum Laboratory Network p4
St. David’s Health Network p3
St. David’s HealthCare Partnership p3
St. Jude Medical p2
T
Templeton Global Advisors p9
Teva p13
The HealthCare Group LLC p9
TLC Vision p9
Triad Hospitals p2
Triad Laboratory Alliance p4
TruVision p9
Ty Cobb Healthcare System p3
V
VNU, NA p9
W
Walgreen Co. p2
Walgreens Home Care p2
WebMD p12
WellPoint p9
Westlake Senior Living p4
Wockhardt p13
Wyeth p13
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JNJ Cuts Offer By 15 Percent, Will Buy
Guidant For $21.5 Billion
Last December we showcased 2004’s
largest domestic transaction: Johnson & Johnson’s (NYSE: JNJ)
purchase of medical device maker Guidant Corporation (NYSE: GDT) in
a deal worth $25.4 billion. During the 11 months since its announcement,
this deal has unfolded—and nearly unraveled—in ways the parties to the
transaction may not have anticipated.
As months of due diligence wore on,
the media reported on safety problems with some of Guidant’s implantable
heart defibrillators and pacemakers, the attendant product recalls and the
inevitable lawsuits. This news, along with a 22% decline in GDT’s stock
price from mid-December 2004 to mid-November 2005, naturally prompted JNJ
to question the wisdom of completing the deal on its original terms.A period of intense
negotiation ensued. Guidant wanted to get the deal done, and had already
tipped its hand by taking preliminary steps to integrate its business into
JNJ’s. And although JNJ would also benefit by closing the deal, it smelled
an opportunity and used the "material adverse effect" clause in the merger
agreement to open a wedge in negotiations. What followed was a classic
study in brinksmanship. JNJ signaled that it was not happy with the
original price and valuation, and that it would walk away from the deal
without appropriate accommodations. Anxious to get the deal done, Guidant
responded by suing JNJ to complete the deal; but in doing so, they
blinked. One week later, terms of a revised deal, more favorable to JNJ,
were announced.
Johnson & Johnson now proposes paying
$21.5 billion, or $3.9 billion less than the original $25.4 billion. Under
terms of the revised agreement, JNJ will offer $33.25 in cash and 0.493
shares of stock (currently worth $29.83), or a total of $63.08, for each
share of GDT stock, as compared with the original $30.40 in cash and
$45.60 in JNJ common stock. As something of a sop to GDT and its
negotiators, JNJ agreed to let the value of the revised deal rise or fall
in relation to its share price.
As for valuation, the revised price
offers 5.8x (current) revenue and 21.5x EBITDA, compared with the original
multiples of 6.7x and 30.4x, respectively. Taking into account GDT’s cash
on hand, the net cost to JNJ effectively drops to $19 billion, which would
lower the respective revenue and EBITDA multiples to 5.1x and 19x. The
corresponding original multiples, taking into account cash available and
the financials at the time, were 6.4x revenue and 28.6x EBITDA. So JNJ
emerges with better terms.
But what we’re wondering is, What
does the $4 million difference between the original and the revised price
tags really represent? Is that the amount that JNJ truly believes is
needed for any further retooling of the defective devices and for legal
reserves to defend against lawsuits and potential awards? In part,
perhaps. But we also suspect that part of that amount represents a genuine
savings coup for JNJ because the recalls had left GDT with jarred nerves
and the unenviable prospect of protracted legal battles and an uphill
climb to rebuild market share and a tattered reputation if the deal didn’t
go through.
Among the cacophony of analysts’
voices, Sherwood Small, a fund manager with Boston Private Value
fund, seems to have been in tune with the negotiations. Two weeks before
the revised terms were announced, Mr. Small made the following
observations, "Everyone knows [Guidant] is not worth $76 per share
anymore, but if the offer is in the high $60s and J&J says $62, you guess
where they’ll meet. There’s an old saying in the M&A business—a dollar for
peace." Just 8 cents off the final price, Mr. Small seems to have nailed
it.
By the way, the revised agreement
also contains a "material adverse effect" clause, but only for future
events. When the deal goes through, now expected to be sometime in January
2006, several lines of business will have to be sold off to satisfy
anticompetitive concerns. Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT), for
example, is already angling to license certain catheter technologies from
JNJ, predicated on the closing of the Guidant deal. |
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