$14 billion loss in 2 years for Indian tycoon shows pharma in real bad shape

The founder of Sun Pharma has seen his net worth fall to $11.1 billion on Bloomberg Index.

$14 billion loss in 2 years for Indian tycoon shows pharma in real bad shape
By Ari Altstedter

Dilip Shanghvi’s shrinking fortune has become one of the most visible casualties of the troubles hitting India’s generic drug industry. Once India’s richest person, he recently slipped to No. 6 with his fortune dropping $14.1 billion from its peak of about two years ago.

The founder and head of Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. has seen his net worth fall to $11.1 billion on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, as shares of India’s largest drug maker tumbled 57 per cent from its all-time high in April 2015. The drop intensified last month after a quarterly earnings report showed the twin headwinds from out of the US that have been hitting India’s drug makers the last few years only worsened for Sun.

India’s sprawling generic drug industry has come under increased scrutiny as the US Food and Drug Administration steps up inspections of approved overseas manufacturers, the largest concentration of which are in the Asian nation. The FDA also authorized a record number of new generic drugs last year, unleashing a flood of competition that has combined with consolidation among the biggest US buyers of generics to force down prices in the world’s largest drug market.

Meanwhile, a key Sun Pharma plant in the Western Indian state of Gujarat was caught up in the regulator’s inspection blitz with the FDA barring new product approvals from the facility until its concerns are addressed. After nearly a year of remediation, the Halol facility was reinspected last year, resulting in a new list of issues. The company said recently it now assumes there will be no new approvals from the plant this year. The US is Sun Pharma’s largest market.


ADVERTISEMENT

A Sun Pharma spokesman declined to comment on the company’s share price and Shanghvi’s net worth.

The sanctioned plant and competition combined last quarter to shrink sales, and prompted Shanghvi to warn in a conference call that the pressure shows no sign of letting up, and could drive Sun’s first annual sales decline in eight years. “There is a new normal that is getting established,” he said.
Top 5 takeaways from RBI's policy meet
1/3
RBI said that the implementation of GST is unlikely to cause any material impact on overall inflation. Headline inflation is expected in the range of 2.3-5 per cent in the first half of the year and 3.5-4.5 per cent in the subsequent half.
RBI said that the implementation of GST is unlikely to cause any material impact on overall inflation. Headline inflation is expected in the range of 2.3-5 per cent in the first half of the year and ..
Read More
The projected real GVA growth for the current financial year has been revised to 7.3 per cent, down 10 basis points from the projection made in April 2017.
The projected real GVA growth for the current financial year has been revised to 7.3 per cent, down 10 basis points from the projection made in April 2017.
Merchandise exports registered double-digit growth for the month of March and April of this year, 80 per cent of which was contributed by engineering goods, petroleum products, gems and jewellery, readymade garments and chemicals. The level of foreign exchange reserves was $381.2 billion as of June 2, 2017.
Merchandise exports registered double-digit growth for the month of March and April of this year, 80 per cent of which was contributed by engineering goods, petroleum products, gems and jewellery, re..
Read More
ADVERTISEMENT
READ MORE

READ MORE:

LOGIN & CLAIM

50 TIMESPOINTS

Related Companies

More from our Partners

Loading next story
Business News › Markets › Stocks › News › $14 billion loss in 2 years for Indian tycoon shows pharma in real bad shape
Text Size:AAA
Success
This article has been saved

*

+