Guest guest Posted December 13, 2001 Report Share Posted December 13, 2001 Pill factory to the world Tanzer, Forbes Global, 12.10.01 India's drug industry is growing beyond cheap knockoffs of Western innovation. It's better to be a pirate than a killer, " says Amar Lulla, the comanaging director of Cipla in Bombay. Lulla's outfit is the type of pharmaceutical manufacturer most associated with India: It ignores patents. Cipla's copy of Bayer's anthrax-fighting Cipro, fabricated by more than 100 Indian drug manufacturers, retails for 12 cents a pill in India, versus $5.50 in Manhattan. With reverse engineering, Cipla, whose revenue in fiscal 2001 was $226 million, makes and sells more than 400 of the world's 500 top branded drugs. Now meet the face of a new Indian pharmaceutical industry: K. Anji Reddy, 58, the soft-spoken founder and chairman of Dr. Reddy's Laboratories, whose headquarters are in Hyderabad. Reddy is lobbying the Indian government to adopt and enforce the international drug-patent regime, something that New Delhi under a World Trade Organization agreement has promised to do by 2005. Reddy aspires to build his enterprise into a research-based drug major. " We [in India] have brilliant people who are as good as or even better than anyone anywhere else in the world, " he insists. " We're ready for 2005. " India, with its flowering of English-speaking, scientifically literate people, just might rise above the business of making generic drugs and ripping off patents. It could become an innovator and a respecter of intellectual property. Dr. Reddy's invests 6.5% of its $276 million sales in research, a habit that it began in 1994. The results are impressive; the company has discovered three molecules it has licensed for diabetes drugs, two to Novo Nordisk, one to Novartis. Anji Reddy says that he's negotiating licenses for several more cholesterol, diabetes and cancer drug molecules discovered in his laboratory. For the three diabetes licenses, Dr. Reddy's should gross $72 million during the drug-development stage. After commercialization, Reddy's will earn royalties on overseas sales and hold comarketing rights in India, where 70 million diabetics live. Even this research-rich company gets a chunk of revenue from generics. Dr. Reddy's generics, though, are increasingly of the sanctioned variety--copies of drugs whose patents have expired. In August, U.S. drug regulators awarded Dr. Reddy's a so-called 180-day exclusive period for the 40-milligram generic version of Eli Lilly's Prozac, which had just come off patent. Merrill Lynch says that Reddy's took an 80% share of the 40-milligram market within eight weeks and estimates that it will net an amazing $45 million on $65 million sales of the generic capsule this year. Merrill forecasts that Reddy's will earn $69 million, 25% of aftertax revenue; that's a better profit margin than Merck's 15%. In April, Reddy's listed on the New York Stock Exchange and, with help from Merrill, raised $133 million. The share price has since more than doubled, to $21, and is this year's best performing ADR. At that, it is only 23 times current fiscal-year earnings and 20 times next year's projections, versus averages of 42 and 27 in the U.S. pharmaceutical sector. The company symbolizes enormous national potential. India missed the industrial revolution, but it is bursting with entrepreneurs and intellectual capital. " Our chemistry skills are among the best in the world, " says G.V. Prasad, Reddy's CEO (and Anji Reddy's son-in-law). In India a chemist with a Ph.D. can be hired for $15,000, versus $100,000 in the U.S. But you need patent protection to keep that talent from voting with its feet. " Since patents weren't recognized in India, the best brains went abroad, " explains Satish Reddy, the company's chief operating officer; educated at Purdue University in the U.S., he is Anji Reddy's son. Ajit V. Dangi, the director general of the Organisation of Pharmaceutical Producers of India, estimates that 15% of the drug scientists in U.S. laboratories are Indian immigrants. But he foresees a " revolution " in the Indian industry, including an influx of foreign investment in research and clinical testing--if the Indian government implements the patent law. Will it? In a 1970 law the government stopped recognizing product patents on drugs. This permitted Indian drug companies to reverse-engineer Western pharmaceuticals without paying licensing fees. Foreigners' share of the Indian market collapsed from 75% in 1970 to 30% last year. In a poor nation with scant medical insurance and with serious public health problems, the patent abrogation made eminent political sense. It may also, at least transitionally, have spurred industrial competitiveness (rare for India). Today drugs in India typically sell for just 3% to 15% of their U.S. price. V. Thyagarajan, managing director for India of GlaxoKline, the national market leader, estimates that India accounts for 35% to 40% of the drug giant's global sales by volume but only 1% by value. Anji Reddy, who founded Dr. Reddy's in 1984 with $40,000 in cash and a $120,000 bank loan, makes no apologies for his country's history. " We [Dr. Reddy's Labs] are products of that [1970 law]. But for that, we wouldn't be here. It was good for the people of India, and it was good for this company. " The Reddy family's 26% stake in the Bombay-listed company is worth $430 million. In fighting AIDS, Brazil's generics makers have gotten much ink. But according to data from IMS Health Global Services, India's active pharmaceutical sales by volume are about triple Brazil's. India gets efficiencies from huge volume. Quality is high; more than 25 of the country's drug plants have been inspected and approved by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA). The country's chemists are innovative. http://www.forbes.com/global/2001/1210/026.html _______________________________________________ Cross posting from Ip-health mailing list Ip-health@... http://lists.essential.org/mailman/listinfo/ip-health ______________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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