Sun Pharma shares tumble 4% as firm closes in on $12-billion Organon acquisition. What’s spooking investors?
Shares of Sun Pharmaceutical Industries fell sharply after ET reported the company had submitted a $12-billion binding offer for Organon & Co. Investors remain cautious as the pharma major nears its biggest-ever overseas acquisition amid debt conc...

The stock emerged as the top loser on the Sensex and Nifty, as concerns intensified over the size of the proposed deal despite broader market strength.
Mumbai-based Sun Pharma has completed detailed due diligence that lasted over three months and is now finalising a financing package before submission of a firm offer in the coming weeks, ET reported, adding that at least three global banks were mandated last week to back the bid, which will be the largest global M&A involving an Indian pharma major if it goes ahead.
ET on January 19 was the first to report that India’s biggest drugmaker was evaluating the acquisition of Organon, a debt-ridden US company specialising in women’s health that was spun off from MSD (Merck Sharp & Dohme) in 2021. Sun was in negotiations with JPMorgan, MUFG and Standard Chartered Bank for financing, ET reported. In January, Sun had made a non-binding offer before initiating due diligence.
“It’s been hot and cold even after January due to heightened global volatility. But in the last 10 days, Sun has yet again upped its tempo,” said an executive aware of the negotiations. “It’s a massive bet, and it only makes sense if you are playing to win at such an advanced stage.”
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Organon’s debt, intense competition
Organon inherited $9.5 billion of debt during the MSD spinoff and has been facing intense competitive pressure from global drugmakers as well generic suppliers in all three of its broad business segments–women’s health, biosimilars and the established products range, which includes cardiovascular drugs, respiratory and non-opioid pain, bone health and dermatology drugs.
The latest data show Organon reduced debt to $8 billion in calendar 2025. In comparison, Sun has about $3.2 billion (Rs 26,000 crore) of net cash on its balance sheet. The management has said it’s willing to utilise this to fund large acquisitions. In FY26, Sun Pharma clocked sales of Rs 52,000 crore—the US and India contributed almost an equal share of 31-33%. The rest is divided between other markets and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs).
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