Title: The Hepatitis B Vaccine
1The Hepatitis B Vaccine
- Sanofis Springboard into the Asian Market
2Overview
Background
Background
Decision to Transfer Vaccine Technology
Decision to Transfer Vaccine Technology
Benefits of Licensing
Benefits of a Joint Venture
Recommendations
3Current Situation
17, 466 employees
Net earnings 146 M
Total sales 9.3 B
Pharma 56.9
GOAL market leader in European Bio-industry
4Vaccine Technology
Sanofi owns 51 stake in IPP
IPP developed Hepatitis B vaccine (plasma based
and GE technology)
Sales are slow in Europe, US and SEA
5The Options
Sanofi is in negotiations to transfer its new
vaccine technology to Taiwan
Questions
Joint Venture or License?
Should Sanofi transfer vaccine technology?
6Should Sanofi Transfer the Vaccine Technology to
Taiwan?
YES
Asia has the highest incidence rates of Hep B
Sanofi needs to increase its Asian presence
Taiwanese govt wants a mass vaccination program
and is looking to become a world leader in biotech
7Incidence of Hepatitis B
- In 1982, Asia had 170 M of the 220 M chronic HBV
carriers worldwide
8Taiwans Mass Vaccination Program
- Phase I
- New born babies (1.2M/year)
- Phase II
- Unexposed individuals
- women of child bearing age
- children
- adolescents
- adults
9Final Analysis
Recommended by WHO and international health
authorities
TECHNOLOGY
MARKET
220 M carriers worldwide most in Asia
COMPETITION
MSD, Korean Green Cross, Japanese Green Cross
FINANCES
12.6 M in royalties under proposed agreement
ORGANIZATIONAL CAPABILITIES
Pharma, IPP, APALE
10Overview
Background
Decision to Transfer Vaccine Technology
Benefits of Licensing
Benefits of Licensing
Benefits of a Joint Venture
Recommendations
11Licensing
What is Licensing?
- It is the granting of permission to use
intellectual property rights under defined
conditions
Benefits of Licensing
- Penetration into new markets for the Licensor
- Reduced cost and risks for the Licensor
- Technology development for the Licensee
- Control over production for the Licensee
12Benefits for Taiwanese to License
Acquisition of valuable technological skills
immediately
Lower costs per dosage
- Lure back western educated Taiwanese
13Benefits for Sanofi to License
Collect profits on an existent 1st generation
vaccine technology
No effort in the production of hepatitis-B
vaccine No effort in the establishment of clinics
Focus on the Bio-engineered vaccines
14Benefits for Both Parties
Access to complementary assets for commercial
success
Sanofi
Taiwanese
New revenue stream from Asia
Technology transfer and lower cost per dose
15Overview
Background
Decision to Transfer Vaccine Technology
Benefits of Licensing
Benefits of a Joint Venture
Benefits of a Joint Venture
Recommendations
16Joint Ventures
What is a Joint Venture?
- A contractual agreement between two or more
parties to undertake a specific project
Benefits of a Joint Venture
- Access to resources
- Access to markets
- Share costs, risks profits
17Benefits for Taiwanese to Joint Venture
More efficient technology transfer Management
assistance, technical support training
Faster time to market
- Access to a partner with significant research
product development experience
18Benefits for Sanofi to Joint Venture
Better control over technology transfer
Faster entry to the S.E. Asian markets Gain
intimate knowledge of the local markets Increase
sales profits for other products
Better competitive position
19Benefits for both parties
Access to complementary assets for commercial
success
Sanofi
Taiwanese
Marketing Distribution capabilities in Asia
Manufacturing Product Development skills
20Overview
Background
Decision to Transfer Vaccine Technology
Benefits of Licensing
Benefits of a Joint Venture
Recommendations
Recommendations
21Sanofi Best Case Scenario
Sanofi and NSC enter a joint venture
- Sanofi responsible for manufacturing
- NSC responsible for distribution marketing
Benefits
- greater share of profits for Sanofi
- no disclosure of sensitive technology
- access to significant marketing distribution
network without huge investment
22Situation Analysis
Both have drawn up similar terms on the contract
Sanofi Advantages
MSD Advantages
- slightly cheaper vaccine
- accelerated plant setup (modular design)
- access to second generation technology
- important contacts in NSC
- political leverage U.S. has trade deficit with
Taiwan - ahead in Singapore negotiations
Without offering access to second generation
technology Sanofi does not have a strong
bargaining position
23Consequences of No Deal
Taiwan
Sanofi
- can get first generation vaccine and technology
from MSD - will not get second generation vaccine
- loses important market for Hep B vaccine
- gives MSD a greater global market share of Hep B
vaccine
Without a deal both parties stand to lose Sanofi
will lose more if there is no deal
24Sanofi must ensure that it secures the agreement
with Taiwan
Strategy
Use second generation vaccine as added incentive
to close deal
Leverage the value of second generation
technology to push for a joint venture
25Creating a Competitor
Current Agreement
- Taiwan gains all knowledge for first and second
generation technologies - Sanofi gains proceeds from setup of manufacturing
and technology transfer plus royalties on sales - Taiwan is free from obligations after 12 year
period - Sanofi gains no marketing advantages
26Recommendations
- Proceed with transfer of technology of the first
generation vaccine as a licensing agreement
outlined in the Paris meeting of 1984
Remove all references to transfer of second
generation technology in its current form
Proceed with transfer of second generation
technology as a joint venture to research
manufacture and distribute vaccine in Asia
Sanofi and NSC will share the profits from all
sales of second generation vaccine
Second generation vaccines should replace first
generation vaccines in the market as soon as it
becomes feasible to do so
27?
Questions