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King Pharmaceuticals

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King Pharmaceuticals
Company typePrivate foundation = 1994
IndustryPharmaceutical company, health care
HeadquartersBristol, Tennessee, USA
Key people
Brian Markison, CEO
Joseph Squicciarino, CFO
Eric J. Bruce, CTO
ProductsPharmaceuticals
Revenue$1.7 billion USD (2009)[1]
$236 million USD (2009)[1]
$92 million USD (2009)[1]
Number of employees
3,381
Websitewww.kingpharm.com

King Pharmaceuticals, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pfizer based in Bristol, Tennessee. Before being acquired by Pfizer, it was the world's 39th largest pharmaceutical company.[2][3][4] On October 12, 2010, King was acquired by Pfizer for $14.25 per share.[5] King produced a wide range of pharmaceuticals, including Altace for heart attack prevention, Levoxyl for hypothyroidism, Sonata, a sleeping aid, and Skelaxin, a muscle relaxant. King Pharmaceuticals operated manufacturing facilities in Bristol, Tennessee; Rochester, Michigan; St. Louis, Missouri; St. Petersburg, Florida; and Middleton, Wisconsin. They employed approximately 2,700 people including a sales force of over 1,000 individuals.

King's wholly owned subsidiaries were Monarch Pharmaceuticals, Inc., King Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Inc., Meridian Medical Technologies Inc., Parkdale Pharmaceuticals, Inc., King Pharmaceuticals of Nevada, Inc., and Monarch Pharmaceuticals Ireland Limited.

Company history

King Pharmaceuticals was founded in 1993 John M. Gregory, Randal J. Kirk, Joseph "Joe" R. Gregory, Jefferson "Jeff" J. Gregory, and James E. Gregory.[6][7]In January 1994, King acquired a former King College campus plant in Bristol, Tennessee. The 500,000-square-foot (46,000 m2) facility was purchased for $1.18 million from RSR Pharmaceutical, who had been using it after Beecham merged with SmithKline. King initially manufactured drugs for other pharmaceutical companies, but soon established a strategy of acquiring branded prescription drugs, which have a much higher gross margin than contract manufactured drugs.

King Pharmaceuticals obtained about twenty smaller branded drugs from the start up of the company until it went public in June 1998. The King Pharmaceuticals subsidiary Monarch Pharmaceuticals acquired one of its most profitable branded drugs, Altace, later the same year on December 18, 1998 from Hoechst Marion Roussel.

Corporate Name

While the company was widely and incorrectly reported within the business news media to have been named after Jesus, the chosen company name was paying homage to both the locally based King College (King Pharmaceuticals had acquired the former King College property on Fifth Street) and first letters from the family last names of the company founders, with the "K" representing founder Randal J. Kirk and the letter "G" primarily representing John M. Gregory and his Gregory relatives within the company.[8]

U.S. marketing and distribution rights to Altace™

During 1994, the U.S. National Right to Life Committee announced an anti-RU-486 boycott, targeting all Hoechst pharmaceutical products including Altace™. By September 17, the pro-life organization Pharmacists For Life International joined the NRLC anti-RU-486 boycott "...against the American subsidiary of Hoechst, AG Hoechst-Roussel, Hoechst-Celanese, its generic subsidiary Copley Pharmaceuticals and the agricultural Hoechst subsidiary"[9] while asking U.S. consumers to "...focus on key Hoechst drugs which have the most economic impact rather than taking an across-the-board shotgun approach"[9] and specifically targeting Altace as a boycott list item.[9][10]

Hoechst merged with Marion Merrill Dow of Kansas City, Missouri in 1995, forming the Hoechst U.S. pharmaceutical subsidiary Hoechst Marion Roussel (HMR). Altace was bringing in under $90 million in U.S. revenues for HMR and Hoechst had stopped promoting Altace within the United States.,[11] and King Pharmaceuticals President Jefferson "Jeff" Gregory also began negotiations in 1995 with Hoechst to acquire U.S. distribution rights to Altace.[11]

The King Pharmaceuticals wholly owned subsidiary Monarch Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (another brother of John Gregory - Joseph Gregory - was then the president of Monarch Pharmaceuticals) acquired ownership of the U.S. distribution and marketing rights to Altace and other Hoescht products from Hoescht AG subsidiary Hoechst Marion Roussel of Kansas City, Missouri on December 18, 1998, and [12] following a January 1999 merger a few weeks later with Rhône-Poulenc, Hoechst assumed the new corporate identity of Aventis).

In 2001, Forbes magazine ranked John Gregory among the 400 richest Americans. The bulk of Gregory's personal fortune was due in large part due to the ability of King Pharmaceuticals, Inc. to reintroduce the Hoechst branded prescription drug Altace back into the U.S. market under the King Pharmaceuticals,Inc. subsidiary Monarch Pharmaceuticals brand following the 1998 U.S. marketing and distribution agreement between King Pharmaceuticals/Monarch Pharmaceuticals and AG Hoechst/HMR.

In late December 1998, King Pharmaceuticals (d.b.a. Monarch Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) purchased the U.S. marketing and distribution rights of the company's most successful drug, Altace, for $362.5 million from the U.S. subsidiary of Hoechst AG, Hoechst Marion Roussel of Kansas City.[13] As a result of increasing the number of sales representatives and the findings of the Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation (HOPE), Altace sales skyrocketed. Using profits from Altace, King continued to add product lines, the most significant purchases being Levoxyl, Thrombin, and Cytomel in 2000.[citation needed] Also in 2000, seeing fewer opportunities to obtain branded drugs, the company acquired an R&D company based in North Carolina.[citation needed] In 2002, King purchased a maker of auto-injectors, Meridian Medical Technologies.[citation needed]

In 2002, John Gregory stepped down as CEO, and his brother Jefferson Gregory took over. Then in 2004, Jeff Gregory stepped down as well after the SEC began investigations into King’s Medicaid billing practices.[14] The board named Brian Markison to replace him. Soon after, in July 2004, a deal was made for Mylan Laboratories to acquire King for $4 billion.[15] Investors, most notably Carl Icahn, were critical of the merger, saying that Mylan was overpaying for King. The next year the deal was called off.

In 2008 King Pharmaceuticals acquired Alpharma Pharmaceuticals to expand into the pain treatment market. From the acquisition, King gained the patents on the pain management drugs, Flector and Embeda.[16]

Acquisition

On October 12, 2010, Pfizer Inc. (NYSEPFE) announced it would acquire Bristol-based King Pharmaceuticals, Inc. for a total cost to Pfizer of $3.6 billion in cash or $14.25 per share. The acquisition was expected to expand Pfizer's product line of pain relief and management medication by adding King products such as Embeda, Avinza, and the Flector Patch.[17] Other product lines that made King attractive to Pfizer included the EpiPen for emergency delivery of medications and the Alpharma animal health line.[18]

References

  1. ^ a b c King Pharmaceuticals 2009 Annual Report
  2. ^ Untitled Document
  3. ^ http://www.kingpharm.com/fast_facts.asp
  4. ^ Pharmaceutical Executive - 2006 Top 50 Pharmaceutical Companies
  5. ^ "Pfizer to Buy King Pharmaceuticals for $3.6 Billion". The New York Times. October 12, 2010.
  6. ^ King Pharmaceuticals, Inc. - Company History
  7. ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20030201091134/http://www.kingpharm.com/chairman.htm King Pharmaceuticals, Inc. - Message From Our Chairman.
  8. ^ http://www.pharmexec.com/pharmexec/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=333311&pageID=6 "King Without The Crown". Pharmaceutical Executive. June 1, 2006.
  9. ^ a b c "3) Pharmacists For Life Joins International Boycott". Life Communications. November, 1994.
  10. ^ "Abortion Foes To Boycott Drugs (Altace) Made By RU-486 Manufacturer". The Virginia-Pilot. Associated Press. July 8, 1994.
  11. ^ a b "Faith Healers: The born-again Gregory brothers worked a financial miracle from cast-off drug brands". Forbes. Zina Moukheiber. October 28, 2002.
  12. ^ "Monarch Pharmaceuticals acquired". sanofi-aventis Group. December 18, 1998.
  13. ^ http://archive.twst.com/notes/articles/jab202.html "King Pharmaceuticals CEO focuses on patented products".
  14. ^ TheStreet.com : King Pharmaceuticals CEO to Step Down | Robert Steyer | KG
  15. ^ Abboud, Leila; Berman, Dennis K. (July 26, 2004). "Mylan to Buy King Pharmaceuticals". The Wall Street Journal.
  16. ^ King Pharmaceuticals Acquires Alpharma They also gained a completely separate animal health division, which focuses on the many agricultural and animal health needs of livestock animals.
  17. ^ Pfizer to Acquire King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
  18. ^ "Pfizer Completes Acquisition Of King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Pfizer and King begin joint operations on March 1, 2011" (press release). Pfizer. March 1, 2011.