logo
Focus: Big pharma fears best-selling drugs in crosshairs of US-EU tariff spat

Focus: Big pharma fears best-selling drugs in crosshairs of US-EU tariff spat

Reuters18-03-2025

LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - Drugmakers are urging the Trump administration and European Union officials to exclude medical goods from expanding tariff wars, hoping to avert price spikes on top-selling medicines made in Europe from Novo Nordisk's (NOVOb.CO), opens new tab Wegovy for weight loss to Merck's (MRK.N), opens new tab cancer immunotherapy Keytruda.
In conversations with U.S. officials, the pharmaceutical industry argued that tariffs on the EU would increase drug costs and create access barriers for patients, endangering priorities outlined in President Donald Trump's health-related executive orders on drug pricing and increasing life expectancy of Americans, according to more than a half dozen pharma industry sources with direct knowledge of the discussions.
here.
Some are signalling a willingness to expand manufacturing in the United States, while pressing for tax breaks and regulatory changes that would make it easier to make that happen, according to three of the sources.
"We are firmly delivering the message to the Trump administration and to the European Union that patients will pay the price" for tariffs, said a senior executive at a European drugmaker.
Industry executives are also pressing their case with officials in Brussels, urging the EU hold off on retaliatory tariffs even if Trump includes medicines in a trade dispute, several of the sources said. Some raised the fact that lifesaving medicines were excluded from sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.
"We as Western countries have interconnected supply chains in this sector. Interrupting these flows will hurt patient access to lifesaving medicines," said a senior executive at another large European drugmaker. "It's a lose-lose" situation.
Pharmaceutical products have long been spared from trade wars due to the potential harms. But Trump's move to increase tariffs on goods from China, including finished drugs and raw ingredients, as well as an initial round of tariffs between the U.S. and EU on goods like steel and bourbon, has raised expectations that medicines will join the list.
The majority of medicinal supplies imported from China are of low monetary value. But the U.S. depends on medicines partly produced in Europe that bring in hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue.
For example, Novo Nordisk partially makes some of the active pharmaceutical ingredient for obesity injection Wegovy in Denmark, while Merck's mega-blockbuster Keytruda and AbbVie's (ABBV.N), opens new tab wrinkle treatment Botox are made in Ireland.
Novo Chief Executive Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen said this month that his company would experience short-term impacts from tariffs, but is moving to produce domestically more of its medicines sold in the U.S. The company last year announced a $4.1 billion investment to expand production in North Carolina.
Merck declined to comment for this story. AbbVie declined to comment on where individual medicines are manufactured but said it has a robust manufacturing network globally.
The U.S. government, a major buyer of drugs for its massive Medicare and Medicaid health programs, may face higher prices to account for the cost of tariffs, said Simon Baker, head of global biopharma research at Redburn Atlantic.
Emily Field, head of European pharma equity research at Barclays, told Reuters that until very recently she thought tariffs on prescription drugs were not a serious threat. Now she is "getting asked about this nonstop by clients," she said.
'NOT BROKEN'
Industry sources declined to say how the Trump administration has responded to its messages. The U.S. president has previously announced tariffs on trade partners only to subsequently suspend or delay them or allow exceptions. One source said it was impossible to know which of several trade policy philosophies would prevail in the White House.
Trump last week called out Ireland for luring pharmaceutical companies with tax breaks, contributing to a "massive deficit." White House officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The European Commission declined to comment.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the dependency of the U.S. and EU on China and India for raw ingredients to make critical drugs and hospital supplies, as governments competed for materials used in vaccines and protective gear.
Many large drugmakers have since sought to delink supply chains for the Western and Chinese markets. But the notion of separating production ties between Europe and the U.S. was not seriously considered, several of the sources said.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly (LLY.N), opens new tab recently announced plans to spend at least $27 billion on four new manufacturing plants in the U.S., but many drugmakers would find it difficult to follow suit, several of the sources said.
Building a new production facility in the U.S. can cost up to $2 billion and take 5 to 10 years before it is operational, including time and costs related to fulfilling regulatory requirements, according to industry trade group PhRMA.
A senior executive from one of the European drugmakers said creating a wholly U.S.-based manufacturing process would mean diverting funds from researching future medicines, and amounts to "fixing something that is not broken."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump demands a ‘Thank You' from Newsom after appeals court delays bid to boot military from Los Angeles
Trump demands a ‘Thank You' from Newsom after appeals court delays bid to boot military from Los Angeles

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump demands a ‘Thank You' from Newsom after appeals court delays bid to boot military from Los Angeles

President Donald Trump said California Governor Gavin Newsom should be 'thanking' him for calling in the National Guard in Los Angeles after an appeals court ruling delayed the military being used to help stop anti-ICE protests. A U.S. District Judge ruled Trump's deployment of National Guard troops in LA was 'illegal' and violated the Tenth Amendment, and that troops had to leave. But a late-night decision by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dealt a blow to Newsom and delayed the implementation of the lower court order. 'Incompetent Gavin Newscum should have been THANKING me for the job we did in Los Angeles, rather than making sad excuses for the poor job he has done,' Trump raged on Truth Social Thursday evening. 'If it weren't for me getting the National Guard into Los Angeles, it would be burning to the ground right now!' For now, Trump will maintain control of the National Guard in LA after the court rulings. Before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals intervened, Newsom had touted the district judge's decision as a win. 'The court just confirmed what we all know — the military belongs on the battlefield, not on our city streets,' Newsom wrote in a statement on X. 'This win is not just for California, but the nation. It's a check on a man whose authoritarian tendencies are increasing by the day.' Newsom and Trump have been trading barbs all week. The governor raised concerns about Trump's mental acuity Thursday, saying the president fabricated details of a conversation about federalizing the state's National Guard. The military said that by Friday evening, a battalion of 700 Marines is expected to join the National Guard in Los Angeles to protect ICE agents conducting immigration raids. After a week of unrest, more protests against the Trump administration's ongoing workplace raids erupted in Southern California and across the nation, which are expected to continue through the weekend, aligning with the president's birthday parade.

Oil prices soar after Israel launches strikes on Iran's capital
Oil prices soar after Israel launches strikes on Iran's capital

Leader Live

time38 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Oil prices soar after Israel launches strikes on Iran's capital

The price of Brent crude jumped nearly 10% higher at one stage before easing back a little to stand 7% higher at 74 US dollars a barrel. London's FTSE 100 Index dropped 0.6%, down 56 points to 8828.6, in early morning trading on Friday after heavy overnight losses on Asian stock markets as the worries spooked investors, with the UK's top tier falling back from a record high set in the previous session. The strikes by Israel on Iran's capital Tehran early on Friday are said to be the most significant attack the country has faced since its 1980s war with Iraq and have led to concerns over an all-out conflict between the two Middle Eastern countries. In Washington, the Trump administration said it had not been involved in the attack and warned Iran not to retaliate against US interests or personnel. It threatens disruption to the supply of crude from the Middle East while some traders flagged concerns it could also impact the flow of liquified natural gas (LNG) if tensions escalate. Rising oil prices could threaten to push up inflation in the UK, possibly impacting the outlook for further interest rate cuts. The Bank of England has been cutting rates but, as inflation strays further from the 2% target, it has less leeway to bring down borrowing costs. Derren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: 'It's not just the outlook for Iranian exports that's a concern but also the potential for disruption to shipping in the Persian Gulf's Strait of Hormuz, a key route for about 20% of global oil flows and an even higher proportion of liquified natural gas haulage.' He added: 'The escalation of military action adds another factor to consider for central bankers in an already complex world as they weigh up the inflationary impact of ever-changing tariff rates and a weakening outlook for jobs and growth.' On the London market, oil giants BP and Shell were among the biggest risers on the steep gains in the cost of crude, with shares up 2% for both firms. Aerospace giant BAE Systems was also moving higher as the threat of a full-scale war in the Middle East put defence stocks back in the spotlight, with the stock up 3%. But London-listed airlines were down sharply, hit by a double whammy as rising oil prices spell higher fuel costs for the sector and following the devastating air crash in India. British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines fell more than 4% and easyJet was just under 4% lower in morning trading. Gold prices also leaped towards another fresh record as investors raced for safe haven assets, which could see it breach the 3,431 US dollars-an-ounce high set earlier this month. Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, said: 'If the oil price continues to climb towards 100 US dollars in the coming days, then we could see the interest rate futures market price out rate cuts from the US and Europe, which may add to downside pressure on stocks. 'However, if there is no nuclear escalation, then we think we could see oil prices settle back around 70 US dollars per barrel.'

Liverpool agree potential British record deal for Florian Wirtz
Liverpool agree potential British record deal for Florian Wirtz

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Liverpool agree potential British record deal for Florian Wirtz

The Reds had two bids rejected, the last one of £113m which would have seen £100m paid up front with performance-related add-ons, but have finally got the deal over the line. Liverpool will still pay an initial £100m – comfortably surpassing their own record outlay – but the performance-related add-ons, if achieved, would make it a potential British record. Leverkusen had valued the 22-year-old Germany international around £125m but regardless, Liverpool's overall outlay could surpass the £115m Chelsea paid Brighton in 2023 for Moises Caicedo – who turned down Anfield after the Seagulls had accepted an offer which was subsequently matched by their Premier League rivals. Striker Darwin Nunez was their previous record signing in 2022, although they have not paid the full £85m as he has not met all the requirements for certain add-ons to be due. Liverpool, like a number of top European clubs, had been watching Wirtz for some time but did not consider themselves front-runners for his signature. However, after Manchester City pulled out, reportedly due to the spiralling costs of the whole package, and Wirtz expressed a preference for Merseyside over Bayern Munich, sporting director Richard Hughes changed gear. Talks were already ongoing with Leverkusen over Jeremie Frimpong, who became the first new addition to Arne Slot's squad in a £30m deal late last month, which made the line of communication easier. Hughes' connections with his former club Bournemouth mean he was also well-placed to progress talks with the Cherries over the signing of left-back Milos Kerkez, a player he originally brought to the Premier League. The full extent of Wirtz's fee will only be paid if Liverpool enjoy a sustained level of elite success and the club's view is that should that be the case, the considerable cost will have been recouped on the pitch. With Kerkez next on the list their summer spending could edge close to £200m, made possible by financial discipline in the last two windows which saw only Federico Chiesa brought in for a cut-price £10m last August. That approach was justified when Slot's team won the title but with their rivals strengthening it was apparent additions were required in certain areas. It is likely to be their biggest summer window since 2018 when Naby Keita, Fabinho, Xherdan Shaqiri and Alisson Becker were recruited for around £170m, with Virgil van Dijk having signed for £75m the previous January. Owners Fenway Sports Group have, despite their 'Moneyball' reputation, not been afraid to splash out big fees for transformative players like Van Dijk and Alisson – and Wirtz, one of the hottest prospects in Europe, falls into that category. The fact the forward, who only turned 22 a month ago, opted for Anfield over more lucrative offers from other European clubs is also seen as validation of the work Slot has done and the squad he already has at his disposal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store