Allergan shares shed 21% on plans to curb tax inversions

Pharma group agreed to merge with Pfizer last year to take advantage of Ireland’s lower corporate tax rate

Allergan, which is run from New Jersey but has a legal domicile in Dublin, last year agreed to merge with Pfizer in a $160 billion deal that would give New York-based Pfizer a foreign address and a lower tax rate. (Photograph: ANDREW GOMBERT/EPA)
Allergan, which is run from New Jersey but has a legal domicile in Dublin, last year agreed to merge with Pfizer in a $160 billion deal that would give New York-based Pfizer a foreign address and a lower tax rate. (Photograph: ANDREW GOMBERT/EPA)

Allergan Plc shares plummeted 21 per cent in late trading Monday after the US Treasury Department released rules that would limit the ability of US companies to avoid paying taxes by issuing debt to their foreign parents.

Allergan, which is run from New Jersey but has a legal domicile in Dublin, last year agreed to merge with Pfizer in a $160 billion deal that would give New York-based Pfizer a foreign address and a lower tax rate.

Allergan’s shares fell 21 per cent $217.99 at 6:39 p.m. in New York, after the market closed. Pfizer shares rose 2.3 per cent to $31.42.While not technically a so-called tax inversion, the deal between the drugmakers was criticised as the latest in a series of transactions that saw US-based companies moving their legal addresses overseas to take advantage of lower tax rates.

The new company formed by the deal between Pfizer and Allergan would be able to take advantage of Ireland’s 12.5 per cent corporate tax rate, compared to a US rate of 35 per cent.

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The agency's plans may not hold up in court, said Corey Davis, an analyst at Canaccord Genuity Inc. in New York. Even then, it's unlikely to affect the shuffling of assets that is now under way among Allergan, Pfizer and Teva Pharmaceutical, which is buying Allergan's generic drugs business, he said.

'Little chance'

“There’s little chance this will affect Pfizer’s proposed acquisition of Allergan, since the tax consequences were never the main thrust of the acquisition,” Davis said. He also said that Allergan’s deal to sell its generics business to Teva should go through, giving the company cash and ensuring there will be little change to the company’s ongoing business.

The Treasury’s proposals were likely already part of Pfizer’s calculus when considering the deal, said Mark Schoenebaum, an analyst at Evercore ISI in New York. How any change affects the deal won’t be clear until the company comments on the tax changes, he said.The companies appear to have anticipated the possibility in their merger agreement. The terms, outlined in a regulatory filing, lay out a $400 million breakup fee in the event of an “adverse tax law change” -- a far smaller amount than for other circumstances if the deal were to fall apart.

Pfizer, the maker of Viagra, and Allergan unveiled the deal in November, the largest ever in the pharmaceutical world. The combination helped make 2015 the biggest ever in health-care mergers with more than $600 billion worth of acquisitions announced. Members of Congress decried the deal, with some saying that it called for restrictions on the practice and tax reform.”We are conducting a review of the US Department of Treasury’s actions announced today,” Pfizer and Allergan said in a joint e-mailed statement. “Prior to completing the review, we won’t speculate on any potential impact.”

Bloomberg