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Sanofi CEO Viehbacher Wants More Cuts; Drug Reps' Necks on the Block

By Jim Edwards | Feb 10, 2009

Sanofi-Aventis’s Q4 earnings call tomorrow could set the stage for a dramatic few days at the company, according to Bloomberg, as CEO Chris Viehbacher told analysts and his staff that Sanofi needs to cut operating costs and possibly buy a small or midsize firm. Viehbacher wants to get $1.3 billion in cuts out of his operation.

Sanofi staff, who already saw a round of layoffs in December, should brace for the worst. And those staff — particularly the drug reps — would also have a right to be angry. Over the last year or so, they’ve produced more revenue per dollar of salaries than almost any other major pharma company.

In fact, Veihbacher’s real problem is the stock market. Bloomberg:

Sanofi fell 28 percent last year, the worst performance among Europe’s top five drugmakers. The stock has dropped 7.2 percent so far this year, compared with a 2.1 percent decline for London-based Glaxo. It rose 62 cents, or 1.4 percent, to 45.30 euros at 9:58 a.m. in Paris.

While there is no doubt that Sanofi needs to buy something to replenish its pipeline — 35 percent of its revenue is threatened by generics — that threat isn’t as dire as it is at somewhere like Bristol-Myers Squibb. Sanofi’s threat will take six years to play out, according to Bloomberg.

So it’s worth asking whether Viehbacher has “New CEO Disease,” the psychological affliction that grips incoming chief executives and forces them to make major corporate strategy decisions just to demonstrate that they’re new, even if those decisions might not work out. (We saw the disease run rampant at Eli Lilly with John Lechleiter; the phage developed more slowly in Pfizer’s Jeff Kindler.)

The speculation over where Viehbacher will turn for an acquisition is already running up the stock of small companies based on rumors — Indian generics maker Piramal had to put out a statement saying that reports of Sanofi’s interest in the company were unfounded.

Here’s a look at Sanofi’s operating costs. In Q3 2008, the company made €6.8 billion in revenues after spending €1.6 billion on sales and marketing. That means for every euro Sanofi spent on reps and distribution, it earned €4.15 back in revenues. That yield is higher than all of the following companies: AstraZeneca, BMS, Merck, Lilly, Abbott Labs, GlaxoSmithKline, Schering-Plough, Novartis, J&J, Wyeth, and Pfizer.

As for R&D expenses, while it is misleading to match quarterly expenses to revenues because of the years-long lag in results, Sanofi’s margins are the same or lower than Pfizer or Wyeth’s.

So unless Viehbacher has a really horrible Glaxo-sized surprise hidden in his Q4 report tomorrow, it is difficult to conclude that his main problem lies with sales reps. Nonetheless, it is their necks that look likely to be on the chopping block in the coming days.

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
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    FierceMarkets - 284 days 7 hours 36 minutes ago

    When Sanofi-Aventis' new CEO Chris Viehbacher ( photo ) took the center stage earlier this week to discuss his plans for small and mid-sized acquisitions, he also had a few comments to make on prospective cuts in the company's R&D ops. Nature 's blog notes that Viehbacher compared dropping an R&D program to make way for a biotech acquisition...

  • Sanofi CEO eyes small deals, smaller costs

    Fierce Pharma - 285 days 7 hours 14 minutes ago

    Sanofi-Aventis chief Chris Viehbacher (photo) is putting his stamp on the company with new expansion plans--and probably new layoffs. The newly minted CEO needs to slice $1.3 billion in costs from his P&L, analysts say, a figure that can't be reached without another round of job cuts. As you know, Sanofi already laid off hundreds of drug reps in...

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    FierceMarkets - 293 days 6 hours 27 minutes ago

    Sanofi-Aventis' new CEO Chris Viehbacher  has been sending our new signals regarding his interest in a multibillion-dollar acquisition campaign. The Financial Times reports that Viehbacher told staffers on Friday that he was intent on both expanding as well as diversifying the company's product base. For Viehbacher new buyouts would help...

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    FierceMarkets - 285 days 7 hours 48 minutes ago

    Sanofi-Aventis CEO Chris Viehbacher told the Financial Times that the pharma giant had "missed the boat" when it comes to diversifying into biologics. But he adds that Sanofi has the money it needs to redouble its efforts to strengthen its pipeline. In the interview, Viehbacher also made it clear that he has a dim view of the path Pfizer is...

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    There were no nasty surprises in Sanofi-Aventis's Q4 results. Yesterday, BNET had suggested that CEO Chris Viehbacher's desire to cut $1.3 billion in operating costs would fall upon sales reps, whose jobs would be axed. We also noted that, dollar for dollar (or euro for euro, in this case) Sanofi's reps are some of the most productive in the...

 

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