sabrina ballet
(Reuters) – Pfizer filed a second lawsuit on Monday accusing Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk of planning its $9 billion bid for Messera to delay the biotech company’s entry into the obesity treatment market rather than completing a deal.
Novo and Metsera on Monday rejected Pfizer’s claims, dramatically escalating the fight for control of the biotech startup. A judge is scheduled to analyze the complaint on Tuesday.
After a private bidding war with Novo that lasted several months, Pfizer agreed in September to pay up to $7.3 billion for Metsera, which is developing a next-generation obesity treatment.
Metsera has rejected Novo’s offers six times, saying Novo already has a large slice of the market and could be subject to antitrust scrutiny. But after Novo’s top investor reshuffled its board last week, the Danish company launched a new competitive bid.
Surprisingly, Metsera said Novo’s offer was superior and gave Pfizer until Tuesday to submit a higher bid.
As a result, Pfizer sued Mesera’s board and Novo in the Delaware Court of Chancery on Friday, and filed an antitrust lawsuit against Novo in Delaware federal court on Monday.
The state court case was assigned to Vice Chancellor Morgan Zurn, who scheduled a hearing for Tuesday morning.
Metsera criticized Pfizer. gambling When it learned of Novo’s bid on October 25, it canceled its schedule by not filing suit sooner and trying to lower the acquisition price. Pfizer said in a statement that Pfizer’s claims were “nonsense,” adding that it would respond in court.
On Monday, Novo said it had strictly complied with all restrictions under the Pfizer merger agreement.
“We are confident that the facts and the law are on our side,” Novo said in a statement. “Pfizer’s suggestion that Novo Nordisk would damage or potentially disrupt an emerging U.S. competitor is outrageous and not based on fact, common sense or market reality.”
Metsera is developing a new obesity drug that has the advantage of monthly injections compared to the weekly injections required for Novo and Eli Lilly’s Zepbound and Mounjaro’s very popular Wegovy.
Pfizer is investing to help Metsera enter the obesity market, which some analysts expect will soon reach $150 billion a year.
Metsera is researching an experimental treatment that analysts say could generate $5 billion in sales.
Pfizer and NOVO say they aim to delay competition
Pfizer’s second complaint, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Delaware, alleges that Novo Nordisk is using the 30-month “best-period” – the period within which the parties can close the merger – to delay Mesera’s entry into the market for obesity drugs targeting the GLP-1 protein, which is currently dominated by Novo and Eli Lilly.