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Why AbbVie Inc Is Buying Shire PLC

AbbVie Inc (NYSE:ABBV) and Shire PLC (LON:SHP) have strongly complementary research portfolios.

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The rise of Shire (LSE: SHP) has largely been unnoticed. I had always assumed it was a small cap, but did you know it has a market capitalisation (£30 billion) equivalent to BT or Standard Chartered?

Likewise, when I heard that AbbVie were bidding for Shire, my first reaction was: who’s AbbVie? The name actually comes from the demerger of Abbott Laboratories into Abbott and AbbVie. AbbVie is a jeu de mots upon the fact that this the life sciences part of Abbott.

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Complementary drug portfolios

So why is AbbVie buying Shire? Well, the most obvious reason is the tax implications: by being taxed in Britain rather than the States, the joint company’s tax bill would be slashed.

But dig a little deeper and you will find that these companies have strongly complementary portfolios and research bases. Both companies have expertise in biopharmaceuticals: these are biological treatments, ranging from antibodies to stem cells, which very much represent the future of the pharma industry.

Analysing Shire reveals a business that is really a cluster of smaller companies which it has acquired over the past two decades. Each of these smaller companies has expertise in a particular rare disease.

In the past you would never have thought that treatments for rare diseases would be economically viable. Shire confounds that view by bringing together a portfolio of rare disease treatments with pooled research resources.

But AbbVie faces a looming patent cliff

AbbVie is also a biopharmaceutical company, but its expertise is more mainstream, focusing on immunology, kidney disease, liver disease, neuroscience and cancer. But it has a clear weak point: most of its revenues are generated by the arthritis treatment Humira, which is the world’s bestselling drug. Once Humira’s US patent protection expires in 2016, profitability, and I suspect AbbVie’s share price, will tumble.

Checking the fundamentals tells me that, although I will watch this takeover with interest, I won’t be interested in investing. The share prices of both companies have been rocketing. Shire is now on a 2014 P/E ratio of 27, falling to 23 in 2015. AbbVie is on a P/E ratio of 21. These numbers look pricey, reflecting the rapid growth that both these companies have experienced.

This makes these companies considerably more expensive than GlaxoSmithKline (P/E ratio of 14) and AstraZeneca (P/E ratio of 16), and I would prefer these pharma stalwarts as investments, particularly as both GSK and AZN are past their respective patent cliffs. Plus they have a clear pathway to future growth. We have yet to see what shape the newly merged company’s strategy will take.

Indeed if, as looks likely, this takeover takes place, I just wonder whether this might be the cue for the merged company’s share price to take a downward path. If I were a shareholder, I would consider taking profits once the takeover is completed.

Prabhat Sakya has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends GlaxoSmithKline and owns shares in Standard Chartered.

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