Pfizer's approach comes less than a week after
Sanofi went public with its US$52.50 per share cash offer, complaining
that Medivation refused to engage. Medivation subsequently rejected the
offer as too low. Its shares closed on Tuesday at US$57.52.
Medivation has not yet decided whether it
should engage with Pfizer in negotiations and is in discussions with its
financial and legal advisers, the people said. There is no certainty
that Pfizer will press ahead with a bid, they added.
Sanofi currently has no plans to raise its
offer and is waiting for Medivation to launch an auction to sell itself
before it makes any new bid, some of the people said.
The sources asked not to be identified because the matter is not public. Medivation, Sanofi and Pfizer declined to comment.
Based in San Francisco, Medivation is best known for its oncology drug Xtandi, which treats prostate cancer.
For Pfizer, a deal with Medivation would mark
another attempt at building scale in patented drugs after it scrapped
its US$160 billion acquisition of Dublin-based Allergan Plc last month.
The breakdown came days after the U.S.
Treasury issued new rules that weighed on Pfizer's ability to slash its
tax bill by using the deal to redomicile in Ireland.
Earlier on Tuesday, Pfizer Chief Executive Ian
Read said in an interview with Reuters that he would consider another
merger of any size, as long as the deal makes sense. He did not comment
on Medivation.
Sanofi is vying for Medivation in an attempt
to expand in the lucrative oncology sector, as it struggles to
compensate for declining revenues from a key diabetes drug that recently
lost patent protection.
Sanofi's unsolicited approach for Medivation
has echoes of its bid for rare disease drug maker Genzyme in 2011. It
took Sanofi nine months to overcome Genzyme's resistance. It also
offered Genzyme shareholders so-called contingent value rights, which
offered them additional payments if the acquired company was able to
achieve certain performance milestones.
Using contingent value rights in the case of
Medivation may be more challenging for Sanofi, given its lackluster
track record in cancer drugs. However, Sanofi has no plans to use
contingent value rights in any new offer, according to the sources.
(Reporting by Lauren Hirsch and Carl O'Donnell
in New York; Additional reporting by Ben Hirschler in London and Greg
Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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