Celgene to buy Juno for $9 billion to boost cancer pipeline

Reuters 

By and Tamara Mathias

(Reuters) - Corp will pay $9 billion in cash to buy drugmaker Therapeutics Inc, bulking up its developmental pipeline as it works to reduce reliance on its own treatment Revlimid.

said on Monday it would pay $87 per share for the roughly 90 percent of it does not already own.

focuses on chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, known as CAR-T, which harnesses the body's own immune cells to recognize and attack malignant cells. These types of gene therapies have been pegged by many in the as a new frontier in treatment.

Celgene's bid represents a nearly 29 percent premium to Juno's closing price of $67.81 on Friday, and the company's shares were trading just below the bid at $86.12 on Monday morning. Juno's stock was worth less than $46 as recently as last week, before reported that the two companies were working on a deal.

has lost nearly 30 percent of its value since October, as investors sold off shares on concerns over patent challenges to its long-time cash cow Revlimid, weak sales of its drug and the failure of an disease drug that had been touted as a potential blockbuster.

"is in a desperate situation," said Brad Loncar, of Loncar Investments, which runs the Loncar Immunotherapy ETF. "Their revenue growth is running out of gas and they needed to fix this immediately."

Shares of were at $102.61 on Monday.

The two companies have been working together since 2015, when picked up 9.3 percent of for $93 a share.

is yet to get an approval for a CAR-T drug, unlike its rivals Kite Pharma, bought by for nearly $12 billion in 2017, and

to approval is its JCAR017 The companies said they expect it to be approved in 2019 and could bring in peak sales of about $3 billion worldwide.

It has had previous setbacks in developing the treatments, and shut down development of one treatment due to severe neurotoxicity that led to five patient deaths.

Analysts said new treatments from should help diversify Celgene's revenue base.

Revlimid currently accounts for more than 60 percent of its sales.

The deal is the second has struck in January, after agreeing to pay $1.1 billion - and as much as $7 billion if certain milestones are reached - for privately-held Impact Biomedicines.

The Summit, New Jersey-based company also has partnerships with bluebird and Agios Pharmaceuticals Inc, both of which are developing treatments.

said the latest acquisition is expected to add to its 2020 target net revenue incrementally, but will not affect adjusted earnings forecast of more than $13 per share.

The deal was one of two large biotech deals on Monday morning, as French drugmaker also agreed to buy U. S. expert Bioverativ for $11.6 billion, its biggest deal for seven years.

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(Reporting by in New York and in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by , Manas Mishra and Akankshita Mukhopadhyay in Bengaluru; Editing by and Andrew Hay)

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First Published: Mon, January 22 2018. 21:56 IST