
Trump drug price plan could nix investment, warns Roche
Trump signed an executive order Monday aimed at bringing down the notoriously high prescription drug prices paid by US consumers, news that rattled pharmaceutical companies.
Swiss newspaper NZZ reported Trump's move could lead Roche to reassess plans it announced just last month to invest $50 billion in the United States over five years.
Roche, the world leader in cancer treatments, said in a statement it did not expect Trump's new drugs policy to hurt its business in 2025.
"However, should the proposed EO (executive order) go into effect, Roche's ability to fund the significant investments previously announced in the US will be in question," it said.
Trump has been pushing foreign firms to invest more in the United States, saying the way to avoid his tariff assault on foreign-made goods is to produce them on US soil instead.
Prescription drugs were not targeted in Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcements.
Still, Roche appeared to take heed with its April investment announcement, which came just after fellow Swiss rival Novartis said it would increase investment in the United States by $23 billion over five years.
The United States is a key market for Roche, accounting for more than half its pharmaceutical division's revenues.
Roche's US subsidiary Genentech announced a $700-million project Monday to build a new plant in North Carolina, which it says would employ 400 people.
© 2025 AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Trump says Putin 'playing with fire' in new jab at Russian leader
Trump's latest comments came after he called the Kremlin leader "CRAZY" over the weekend following a mass Russian air attack on Kyiv, and warned that Moscow risked new sanctions. "What Vladimir Putin doesn't realize is that if it weren't for me, lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia, and I mean REALLY BAD," Trump said on his Truth Social network Tuesday. "He's playing with fire!" Trump did not specify what the "really bad" things were, or make any specific threats. But the Wall Street Journal and CNN both reported that Trump was now considering fresh sanctions against Russia as early as this week, while stressing that he could still change his mind. Trump had told reporters on Sunday he was "absolutely" considering increasing sanctions on Moscow. The US president's recent rebukes mark a major change from his previous attitude towards Putin, whom he often speaks of with admiration and has previously held off criticizing. Trump has however expressed increasing frustration with Moscow's position in deadlocked truce negotiations with Kyiv. That frustration boiled over at the weekend when Russia launched a record drone barrage at Ukraine, killing at least 13 people. "I've always had a very good relationship with Vladimir Putin of Russia, but something has happened to him. He has gone absolutely CRAZY!" Trump said in a Truth Social post on Sunday night. Russia's attacks have continued despite a phone call between Trump and Putin eight days ago in which the US leader said the Russian president had agreed to "immediately" start ceasefire talks.


Fashion Network
3 hours ago
- Fashion Network
Swiss watches see 18% shipping boom ahead of possible Trump tariffs
Swiss watch exports surged by almost a fifth in April, as shipments to the United States more than doubled ahead of potential expanded tariffs announced by President Donald Trump. According to the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry, total exports rose 18% for the month, reaching 2.5 billion Swiss francs ($3 billion). Exports to the U.S.—the industry's single largest market—spiked by 149%. 'This is the result of early shipments prompted by the announcement of U.S. tariffs,' said Jean-Philippe Bertschy, an analyst at Vontobel. Watches made from precious metals, steel, and bimetallic materials—all targeted by Trump—saw the strongest growth. In contrast, exports to the rest of the world declined by 6.4%, continuing a weak trend from earlier in the year. Bertschy added that the sharp U.S. increase was likely a one-time reaction from exporters looking to avoid higher tariffs, not a sign of long-term demand growth. Trump imposed a 10% tariff on imports from Switzerland in early April and has since threatened a 31% surcharge if a new trade agreement is not reached. The deadline is currently set for July 9, although it may be extended. Any increase would have a significant impact on the watch industry. Performance in Asian markets remained sluggish. April exports to Singapore declined 9%, fell 30% in China, and dropped 23% in Hong Kong. During the most recent earnings season, major luxury groups including Richemont, LVMH and Hermès reported declines in watch sales. 'The rise of 'luxury fatigue,' a declining 'feel-good factor' from luxury purchases, and worsening consumer sentiment all contribute to a less optimistic outlook,' Bertschy noted.


France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Polish Trump fans gather to 'Make Poland Great Again'
But instead of somewhere in the United States, this scene was playing out in an arena in a southern Polish city, complete with a dusting of red or blue "Make Poland Great Again" hats. Hundreds had come for the first Polish edition of the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), a US convention that has been around for decades and has become a celebration of Trump. The event in Rzeszow is a sharp signal of the hold the US leader's particular brand of conservatism has in Poland, which is days from picking a new president from a field that includes a big Trump fan. "Are you happy that America is getting closer to being great again? Did the reelection of Donald Trump bring you joy, make you happy?" CPAC organiser Matt Schlapp asked the crowd, which responded with applause. "We thank you for your courage to be in this room, to stand with us as we fight a most venomous enemy," the chairman of the American Conservative Union said, decrying the "globalists" who he said threatened tenets like family, rule of law and freedom of religion. The event, which was organised in partnership with Poland's right-wing TV Republika, was held in a region populated by conservative voters. Vendors sold trucker hats with the slogan "Make Poland Great Again", CPAC Poland mugs and books including one by historian and nationalist presidential candidate Karol Nawrocki. Nawrocki, who got a standing ovation at the conference, is a Trump fan and met the US leader at the White House earlier this month. He claimed the US leader told him: "You will win". Poland's run-off election on Sunday is shaping up to be a very tight one in the polarised country of 38 million people, as the latest opinion surveys have the candidates tied. Nawrocki, who is backed by Poland's right-wing main opposition party Law and Justice (PiS), will face off against pro-EU Warsaw mayor Rafal Trzaskowski, the candidate of the ruling centrists led by former EU chief Donald Tusk. - 'American style: loud and big' - While most of the Rzeszow crowd was in suits and ties -- there were exceptions like Anna Maria Ziolkiewicz, who came dressed in Poland's national red-and-white colours with a Nawrocki election button on her lapel. "I'm a patriotic, religious person with right-wing views, so this event is right up my alley," the 61-year-old accountant and history buff from the central city of Lodz told AFP. "There's a positive atmosphere... It lifts spirits and motivates," she said. She praised Trump as "a wonderful man with character, brave and strong" -- though cautioned that he did not quite understand the danger posed by Russia. Ziolkiewicz believes Poland should be closer to the United States than to the European Union as "the US has never double-crossed us, never deceived us", while she said countries like France and Britain failed to help Poland at the start of World War II. Krzysztof Pietrzyk, a 43-year-old entrepreneur from nearby Lublin, regretted that the atmosphere at Tuesday's event was "a little bit too quiet". "I was hoping to have here more American style: loud and big," he said, recalling how tech billionaire and Trump ally Elon Musk brandished a chainsaw on stage at this year's CPAC event near Washington. But he said he was looking forward to hearing a speech by special guest US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. Another speaker was George Simion, the defeated hard-right candidate in Romania's presidential election, and a Nawrocki ally. "If we do not win this Sunday in Poland, we will confront the authoritarian regime of (French President) Emmanuel Macron and (EU chief) Ursula von der Leyen," Simion told reporters. Donning a well-worn "Make Poland Great Again" hat, unemployed engineer Zenon Fabianowicz said he covered more than 700 kilometres (over 400 miles) from the western village of Krzeszyce to attend. Poland is a "pro-American society. We have a lot in common with the United States. And I think Trump also has a fondness for Poland," the 62-year-old said.