Pharmaceutical companies
dream of blockbusters: drugs that quickly run up sales of more than $1
billion. But developing and marketing such drugs has become so expensive
that only the largest companies can afford to do so; hence, the recent
string of mergers within the industry. Notwithstanding such high-profile
combinations as those between Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham and
between Pfizer and Warner-Lambert, the pharmaceuticals industry hasn’t
consolidated very much: the 20 biggest competitors combined still have
less than 60 percent of the global market. The next 50 or so companies,
with revenues of $500 million to $3 billion, increasingly look like candidates
for acquisition, mainly because their performance trails that of the leaders.
If current trends continue, the global market share of midsize companies
could shrink from 20 percent in 1999 to just 10 percent by 2010 (Exhibit
1).
Yet the midsize pharmaceutical companies do have a shot at reviving
themselves. A clutch of emerging technologies would make it rewarding
for them to develop and market drugs that tackle the less prevalent diseases
big companies tend to overlook. At the same time, it will become easier—and
more profitable—for midsize companies to in-license drugs developed by
other companies for small-scale...