Advertisement

GlaxoSmithKline chief Emma Walmsley unveils crunch plan for decade of growth

 (AFP via Getty Images)
(AFP via Getty Images)

GlaxoSmithKline chief Emma Walmsley today declared the under-fire drugs giant was set to deliver “a step change in growth” over the next decade as she set out her key strategic goals in the most important day of her career.

Walmsley is in the process of splitting off the company’s vast consumer brands arm but has come under fire from activist investor Elliott in the face of a flagging share price.

Some have questioned whether she should, as planned, run the core pharmaceuticals business after the split, given that she is not a trained scientist.

Asked why she should run it, today she said: “I am a change agent. I am a business leader. I am very excited for the new plan for GSK we are laying out today.

“I have been leading and driving very hard a shift to a more performance-driven company.”

She declared “New” GSK - the core drugs division - would grow profits more than 10% every year up to 2026, putting it the top 25% of pharma companies. Sales growth would be more than 5% a year as the company shifted towards vaccines and high-tech medicines for cancer, HIV and other hard-to-treat diseases.

She said she and her top team were “confident we can deliver” on the new goals.

The new consumer healthcare business, whose brands include Sensodyne and Panadol, will be dermerged “at least 80%” to shareholders, with GSK retaining up to 20% as a short-term financial investment that would be sold at a later stage. The demerger would be tax efficient for shareholders, it said.

Many investors had feared that the group would opt for an IPO of the consumer arm to raise new money from outside investors. Shareholders had worried that they would be diluted in such a process, but Walmsley ruled out such a move, saying she had consulted widely with investors and listened to their concerns.

The dividend will be cut to 45p in 2023 from New GSK, with 55p a share coming from the consumer arm.

Walmsley acknowledged that GSK’s blockbuster HIV treatement Dolutegravir would lose its patent in 2028 and 2029 in the US and Europe but said the loss of revenue would be more than made up by t sales from its late stage pipeline of medicines now in development.

She said there would be a“minimum £33 billion” of sales from those new medicines, not including those in the early stage pipeline, or Covid-derived revenues.

Walmsley said: “The benefits of the huge transformation we have driven since 2017 are now clear. We have strengthened our R&D and commercial execution, and transformed our group structure and capital allocation, while driving a profound cultural change with new leadership.

“Together, we are now ready to deliver a step-change in growth for New GSK and unlock the value of Consumer Healthcare. With world class capabilities across prevention and treatment of disease, New GSK is exceptionally well positioned to positively impact people’s health and to deliver strong performance and value to shareholders through the decade.”

Investors have been keenly awaiting today’s update amid growing dissatisfaction with GSK’s progress.

Elliott, which has bought a stake in the company to press its case, has so far said nothing in public, but is believed to be pushing for Walmsley not to remain in charge of “New GSK” - the pharmaceuticals and vaccines arm of the business.

It is believed to feel that Walmsley’s lack of scientific background make her unsuitable. Despite setting itself up as the world’s biggest vaccines company, GSK has failed so far to come up with a Covid jab.

Rather than work on creating a new vaccine itself, it opted to team up with other firms in partnerships. The plan was for GSK simply to provide the adjuvant accelerator to the active ingredient developed by someone else.

It chose to partner with pharmaceuticals peer Sanofi, but the French group got the doses wrong and it is still held up in trials.

“It is still not over,” she said of Covid, pointing to numerous treatments GSK has in the pipeline.

Walmsley became CEO of Glaxo in 2017, inheriting from predecessor Sir Andrew Witty a declining pipeline of new medicines.

Since her arrival, she has totally overhauled the top level management in its pharmaceuticals and vaccines business and bulked up its consumer division by merging Glaxo’s brands including Sensodyne and Panadol with Pfizer’s, led by Advil, Centrum and Caltrate.

She also bought biotech group Tesaro for $5 billion in a bid to repair its pipeline of new potential blockbuster cancer treatments.

Read More

GlaxoSmithKline shareholders welcome Emma Walmsley plan

FTSE 100 to hold its gains ahead of Glaxo update as Bitcoin rises

City analysts come out in support of Glaxo plan