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Re: Celgene to be Bought

By: Zimbler0 in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 05 Jan 19 5:30 AM | 71 view(s)
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Msg. 19172 of 62138
(This msg. is a reply to 19167 by Decomposed)

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decomposed > At one time, I had almost my entire equities portfolio in this one company.


Sorry De.
But, at the time, I didn't like the speculative nature of Celgene.
And I could never have almost my entire portfolio in one holding.

I am glad that you made a lot of money on it. Good for you.

Remember back around 2009 . . when I lost money on a couple of bank
type stocks? You showed me sympathy . . Thanks for that, but it
really wasn't necessary. They were a relatively small percentage of
my portfolio.

Now if Dominion Resources . . or McCormick . . or several others
were to go bankrupt you'd see me crying the blues.

By the way, McCormick is about 12% of my non-401K investments.
More than I'd like for it to be, but it is what it is and that
is because its' share price has been rocketing upwards lately.

Good Job.
Zim.




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Mad Poet Strikes Again.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
Celgene to be Bought
By: Decomposed
in POPE 5
Sat, 05 Jan 19 4:03 AM
Msg. 19167 of 62138

Sadly, Celgene will soon no longer be. It is to be bought by Bristol-Meyers Squibb for $102.43 per share. That will mark the end of an era for me since I've owned CELG since its debut of Revlimid in 2005. I bought in at what would today be $9.50. At one time, I had almost my entire equities portfolio in this one company. I bought the larger NH property in 2011 with some of the gains from CELG. Total return on the shares I've still got? 927%
`
Celgene is also the company that I wasted the most time trying to convince others to buy. I was almost completely unsuccessful - to the best of my knowledge only persuading my brother and my sister to take stakes.


January 3, 2019

Bristol-Myers to buy Celgene in a $74 billion deal; Celgene shares surge


• Bristol-Myers Squibb announce plans to buy Celgene in a cash and stock deal valued at $74 billion.
• Celgene shareholders will receive one Bristol-Myers Squibb share and $50 in cash for each share held, or $102.43 per share.
• Shares of Celgene surge in premarket trading, while Bristol-Myers Squibb shares fall.


by Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
CNBC

Bristol-Myers to buy Celgene in $74B deal
Bristol-Myers to buy Celgene in $74B deal
7:28 AM ET Thu, 3 Jan 2019 | 03:21

Bristol-Myers Squibb is buying cancer drugmaker Celgene in a cash and stock deal valued at $74 billion, the companies announced Thursday.

Under the agreement, Celgene shareholders will receive one Bristol-Myers Squibb share and $50 in cash for each share held, or $102.43 per share, a premium of 53.7 percent to Celgene's Wednesday close.

Shares of Celgene surged 28 percent in midmorning trading, to near $85 per share, while shares of Bristol-Myers Squibb fell 11 percent.

"Together with Celgene, we are creating an innovative biopharma leader, with leading franchises and a deep and broad pipeline that will drive sustainable growth and deliver new options for patients across a range of serious diseases," Bristol-Myers Squibb Chairman and CEO Giovanni Caforio said in a press release.

Wall Street analysts see the deal as a big win for Celgene. The company was set to lose patent protection by 2022 for Revlimid, its top-selling multiple myeloma drug, concerning investors. The stock has fallen more than 37 percent over the past year.

Early last year, Celgene agreed to buy the rest of Juno Therapeutics it didn't already own for about $9 billion in cash to gain access to Juno's pipeline of cancer drugs.

The company has been working on an experimental new gene therapy called CAR T-cell therapy — taking a patient's own immune cells, called T cells, genetically manipulating them to attack specific proteins on cancer, and infusing them back into the patient. CAR T-cell therapy is a highly competitive and potentially lucrative area of biotechnology.

BMO Capital Markets analyst Alex Arfaei said Thursday the proposed acquisition seems expensive; however, it probably addresses a major strategic priority for New York-based Bristol, which has had several R&D setbacks in the past few years.

New Jersey-based Celgene has also "been under significant pressure given concerns about Revlimid," he said in a note to clients.

Buying Celgene gives Bristol more cancer drugs at a time when its immuno-oncology portfolio struggles to keep up with rival Merck's. But there's skepticism about the deal's price tag.

The boards of directors of both companies approved the deal, which is expected to close in the third quarter. The combined company will have nine products with more than $1 billion in annual sales and significant potential for growth in oncology, immunology and inflammation and cardiovascular disease. The deal is expected to realize $2.5 billion in synergies by 2022.

The two companies have been talking since Sept. 2018, when Bristol approached Celgene.

Bristol-Myers Squibb shareholders will own approximately 69 percent of the company, and Celgene shareholders are expected to own 31 percent.

Caforio will continue to serve as chairman and CEO of the company. Two members from Celgene's board will be added to the board of Bristol-Myers Squibb.

http://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/03/bristol-myers-to-buy-celgene-in-a-74-billion-deal.html


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