- Vast majority of cases will be settled under the agreement
- GSK has not admitted liability in relation to the settlements
The cases represent about 93% of those against the company involving Zantac, GSK said Wednesday in a
Plaintiffs had argued that the company knew that Zantac’s active ingredient, ranitidine, turned into the potential carcinogen NDMA under certain conditions. The
The stock rose 6% in early London trading, reversing what had been a drop of 4.2% in the last 12 months.
The news “lifts a major investor concern and allows the shares to trade on fundamentals, suggesting upside given GSK’s current significant discount to peers across a range of earnings multiples,” Bloomberg Intelligence’s
GSK is among a number of companies that made and sold versions of Zantac, and investor concern about the potential settlement value has weighed heavily on the drugmaker’s
The settlement value is at the lower end of
Plaintiffs decided to settle the case after Delaware’s Supreme Court signaled it might walk back an earlier ruling that went in their favor, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing the deliberations.
Other Settlements
In a September interview with Bloomberg News, Chief Executive Officer
The UK drugmaker also said it had reached an agreement to pay an additional $70 million to settle a complaint filed by Valisure, a pharmacy that tests drugs for contaminants. Valisure had alleged that GSK knew and hid the risks of Zantac from the US government. GSK said that settlement was not an admission of liability.
GSK expects to take an incremental charge in its upcoming results of £1.8 billion ($2.4 billion) in relation to the settlements as well as the remaining 7% of pending state court product liability cases.
GSK’s move doesn’t end litigation around Zantac as other drugmakers are still facing trials, including
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Deirdre Hipwell, Jerrold Colten
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