Business | Close to the edge

Big pharma’s patent cliff is fast approaching

A flurry of deals suggests that drug firms favour buying their way out of trouble

P9748G Bus shelter with advertisement for Keytruda, a monoclonal antibody anti-cancer drug.
Image: Alamy

Aprice tag of $10.8bn would look hefty for most acquisitions of smallish and newish companies. But for Merck, a drugs giant known as msd outside America, the money it is spending to buy Prometheus Biosciences, a biotech firm based in California, is relatively small change. In the world of big pharma such deals have the potential to generate enormous returns.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Close to the edge”

From the April 22nd 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Elon Musk looks on during a conference.

Elon Musk’s xAI goes after OpenAI

The fight is turning nasty

A man waitiing for the lift, which is full of people.

How to behave in lifts: an office guide

Life in an elevator



Gautam Adani faces bribery charges in America

Prosecutors allege one of India’s richest men paid off local officials

Nvidia’s boss dismisses fears that AI has hit a wall

But it’s “urgent” to get to the next level, Jensen Huang tells The Economist

Does Dallas offer a vision of America’s future?

The Texan city embodies the allure of small government