Talk:GlaxoSmithKline/stats, details

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archiving dated material from this page; please see GlaxoSmithKline for most current information.

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Basic Information

HQ Contact information

GlaxoSmithKline plc
980 Great West Road
Brentford, Middlesex TW8 9GS
UK
Phone: 020 8047 5000
Web: http://gsk.com/index.htm

Country of incorporation

England

Ownership status

Public

Primary industry sector

Pharmaceutical

Primary industry ranking

  • 2006:
Fortune Global 500: 143[1]
Fortune Pharmaceutical Rank: 3
Fortune Most Profitable List: 26[2]
  • 2005:
Fortune Global 500: 122

Number of employees worldwide[3]

102,695

Chief executive officer

Jean-Pierre Garnier, 59

Financial information

Ticker symbol

LSE: GSK
NYSE: GSK

Investor website

GlaxoSmithKline Investors

List of largest shareholders[4]

  1. Dodge & Cox LLC, 2.61% (value: $3,809,889,167 on June 30, 2007)
  2. Dodge & Cox Stock Fund 1.13%
  3. Allianz Global Investors .79%
  4. Morgan Stanley .59%

Total revenue[5]

  • 2006: $45,500,098
  • 2005: $37,272,528

Net income[6]

  • 2006: $8,747,382
  • 2005: $5,740,589

Detailed Information

Company history

In 2000, GlaxoWellcome and SmithKline Beecham merged in a stock swap worth $76 billion to form, what was then, the world’s largest pharmaceutical firm: GlaxoSmithKline. Each of these two firms were themselves products of a history of mergers with smaller pharmaceutical interests, but combined they would have over 7% of the global market.[7]

GlaxoWellcome
In 1880, Burroughs Wellcome & Company was founded in London by American pharmacists Henry Wellcome and Silas Burroughs. Wellcome Tropical Researches Laboratories was opened in 1902. McDougall & Robertson Inc. was bought by the Wellcome Company to be more active in animal health. Also, the production center was moved from New York to North Carolina in 1970 and the following year another research center was built.

Glaxo was founded in Bunnythorpe, New Zealand. Originally a baby food manufacturer processing local milk into an early baby food by the same name, which was sold in the 1930s under the slogan "Glaxo builds bonny babies". Still visible on the main street of Bunnythorpe is a derelict dairy factory (factory for drying and processing cows' milk into powder) with the original Glaxo logo clearly visible, but nothing to indicate that this was the start of a major multinational.

Glaxo became Glaxo Laboratories, and opened new units in London in 1935. Glaxo Laboratories bought two companies Joseph Nathan and Allen & Hanburys in 1947 and 1958 respectively. After it bought Meyer Laboratories, it started to play an important role in the US market. In 1983 the American arm Glaxo Inc. moved to Research Triangle Park (US headquarters/research) and Zebulon (US manufacturing) in North Carolina. To be stronger in the medicine market, Burroughs Wellcome and Glaxo, Inc merged in 1995. The new name of the company was GlaxoWellcome. In the same year, GlaxoWellcome opened their Medicine Research Centre in England.

SmithKline Beecham
In 1843, Thomas Beecham launched his Beecham's Pills laxative in England. Beecham opened its first factory in England for rapid production of medicines in 1859. By the 1960s it was extensively involved in pharmaceuticals.

In 1830, John K. Smith opened its first pharmacy in Philadelphia. Over the years Smith, Kline and Company favorably amalgamated with the French, Richard and Company because of their successful management decisions. It changed its name to Smith Kline & French Laboratories to focus more on research in 1929. Years later, Smith Kline & French Laboratories opened a new laboratory in Philadelphia; furthermore, it bought a laboratory called Norden Laboratories which was doing research into animal health to benefit their research in various other areas.

In the 1960s, Smith Kline & French Laboratories attempted to grow through a series of mergers, beginning with the acquisition of Recherche et Industrie Thérapeutiques in 1963. Smith Kline & French Laboratories bought 7 more laboratories in Canada and US over the next six years. In 1982, it bought Allergan which was making products about eye and skin.

SmithKline continued to acquire competitors in the 1980s, beginning with Allergan, a pharmaceutical firm focused on skin and eye-care, for $260 million. In 1981, SmithKline purchased the medical instrument firm Beckman Instruments for $1 billion. Many analysts felt that this move was intended to diversify SmithKline and move them away from a dependence on Tagamet sales.[8] In 1988, SmithKline Beckman bought its biggest competitor, International Clinical Laboratories, and enlarged by 50%.

In 1989, SmithKline, which had been considered a potential take-over target for several larger firms, entered into their largest merger to date, with Beecham Plc, to form the second largest drug company in the world. The combined firm had nearly $7 billion in worldwide revenues. As part of the merger, SmithKline sold off Allergan and distributed its stake in Beckman to shareholders, Beecham sold of its cosmetic operations including: Yardley, Margaret Astor, and Lancaster.

Recent History

Problems with antidepressants for teens

In March 2004, the Canadian Medical Association Journal published excerpts from a GSK "internal document" that advised staff "to withhold clinical trial findings in 1998 that indicated the antidepressant paroxetine (Paxil in North America and Seroxat in the UK) had no beneficial effect in treating adolescents." The GSK memo recommended, in part, that the company needed to "effectively manage the dissemination of these data in order to minimize any potential negative commercial impact" and stated that "It would be commercially unacceptable to include a statement that efficacy had not been demonstrated, as this would undermine the profile of paroxetine." [9]

Improving GSK's public image

Due to the low public standing of GSK and of the drug industry as a whole, GSK began engaging in aggressive, often locally-focused PR.

In spring 2004, GSK launched a "grassroots outreach" effort, sending "sales representatives to deliver its message in front of the religious, fraternal, and other community groups to which they belong." A year into the effort, PR Week reported that GSK's standing had improved by 13 points, according to a Harris Interactive poll. "Clearly the grassroots campaign is having an impact," said Michael Pucci, Glaxo's VP of external advocacy. [10]

GSK "also forged a partnership with WebMD, launching the website plaintalkaboutmeds.com to address issues ranging from the cost of developing drugs to patient assistance programs," reported PR Week. [11]

In Fall 2005, the company will begin "an extensive state-by-state media blitz," paralleling its "grassroots outreach." PR Week reported, "Glaxo will target local media markets in each state - outlets that do not often have the chance to communicate directly with pharmaceutical executives." GSK's Pucci said that local reporters were easier for the drug company to deal with. "These folks are hungry for news," he said. "They'll print everything we say … without the political spin." GSK hired two PR firms for the media work, but declined to name them. [12]

Avandia controversy

Following Dr. Steven Nissen's publication of a study warning that "GlaxoSmithKline's diabetes drug Avandia increased the risk of heart attacks by 43% and death from cardiovascular events by possibly 64%," he was publicly pilloried. "More than one story from ostensibly different sources" derisively referred to him as "St Steven," the "Patron Saint of Drug Safety," and "Saint Steven the Pure," reported Evelyn Pringle in an August 2007 CounterPunch article. [13]

Among the Nissen attackers was FDA spokesman Douglas Arbesfeld. Arbesfeld previously worked at the PR firm Manning Selvage & Lee (MS&L), helping Glaxo and other "healthcare clients maximize internet-relations." Former FDA Deputy Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who ridiculed Nissen in a Wall Street Journal editorial, also consulted for pharmaceutical companies at MS&L. Two more FDA alums, Peter Pitts and Robert Goldberg, mocked Nissen in a Washington Times piece. Pitts is the senior vice-president for global health affairs at MS&L. Goldberg doesn't have ties to the PR firm, but serves with Pitts as an officer of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI), which Pringle describes as a "nest of ex-moles who served the industry in one capacity or another in the Bush Administration's FDA." [14] CMPI is a project of the Pacific Research Institute, a free market think tank.

Paxil Controversy and Lawsuits

In 2003 GSK signed a corporate integrity agreement and paid $88 million in a civil fine for overcharging Medicaid for the antidepressant Paxil, and nasal-allergy spray Flonase. Later that year GSK also ran afoul of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and was facing a demand for $7.8 billion in backdated taxes and interest, the highest in IRS history.

On September 12, 2006 GSK settled the largest tax dispute in IRS history agreeing to pay $3.1 billion. At issue in the case were Zantac and the other Glaxo Group heritage products sold from 1989–2005. The case was about an area of taxation dealing with intracompany "transfer pricing"—determining the share of profit attributable to the US subsidiaries of GSK and subject to tax by the IRS. Taxes for large multi-divisional companies are paid to revenue authorities based on the profits reported in particular tax jurisdictions, so how profits were allocated among various legacy Glaxo divisions based on the functions they performed was central to the dispute in this case.[15]

On December 22, 2006, a US court decided in Hoorman, et al. v. SmithKline Beecham Corp that individuals who purchased Paxil(R) or Paxil CR(TM) (paroxetine) for a minor child may be eligible for benefits under a $63.8 million Proposed Settlement.[16] The lawsuit won the argument that GSK promoted Paxil(R) or Paxil CR(TM) for prescription to children and adolescents while withholding and concealing material information about the medication's safety and effectiveness for minors.

The lawsuit stemmed from a consumer advocate protest against Paroxetine manufacturer GSK. Since the FDA approved paroxetine in 1992, approximately 5,000 U.S. citizens – and thousands more worldwide – have sued GSK. Most of these people feel they were not sufficiently warned in advance of the drug's side effects and addictive properties.

According to the Paxil Protest website, http://www.paxilprotest.com, hundreds more lawsuits have been filed against GSK.[17] The Paxil Protest website was launched August 8, 2005 to offer both information about the protest and information on Paxil previously unavailable to the public. Just three weeks after its launch, the site received more than a quarter of a million hits. The original Paxil Protest website was removed from the internet in 2006. It is understood that the action to take down the site was undertaken as part of a confidentiality agreement or 'gagging order' which the owner of the site entered into as part of a settlement of his action against GlaxoSmithKline. (However, in March 2007, the website Seroxat Secrets [18]discovered that an archive of the Paxil Protest Site was still available on the internet via Archive.org) Gagging orders are common in such cases and can extend to documents that defendants wish to remain hidden from the public. However in some cases, such documents can become public at a later date, such as those made public by Dr. Peter Breggin in February of 2006.[19]

Historical financial results

Previous Annual Reports

Business scope

Lines of business

  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Consumer Healthcare

Units/subsidiaries

GlaxoSmithKline 2006 20-F, p 42

Major Products[20]

GlaxoSmithKline Products
Brand Name Generic Name Date of FDA Approval[21] Date of Patent Expiration[22] 2006 Sales (millions)[23]
Seretide/Advair® fluticasone/salmeterol 2010 £3,313
Avandia® rosiglitazone 2012 (2013, EU) £1,645
Lamictal® lamotrigine 2009 £996
Wellbutrin® bupropion The basic compound patents have expired. Formulation patents expire 2013 £900
Zofran® ondansetron 1991 expired £847
Valtrex® valaciclovir 2009 £845
Coreg® carvedilol phosphate Oct 20, 2006 2007 £779
Imitrex/Imigran® sumatriptan 2009 £711
Flovent® fluticasone propionate expired £659
Paxil/Seroxat®(group) paroxetine hydrochloride 1992 2007 £1,240

Major Wholesalers

Competitors

Pfizer
Merck
Sanofi-Aventis

Geographic scope

Countries of operation

  • Global Pharmaceutical Operations headquarters in Brentford, United Kingdom with US operations based at Franklin Plaza in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
  • Consumer Products headquarters in Moon Township, Pennsylvania suburb of Pittsburgh
  • Major R&D sites in Greenford, United Kingdom; Stevenage, United Kingdom; Harlow, United Kingdom; Ware, United Kingdom; Beckenham, United Kingdom; Verona, Italy; Zagreb, Croatia; Evreux, France; Research Triangle Park, North Carolina; and Upper Merion and Collegeville, Pennsylvania
  • Major manufacturing sites for prescription products in Ware, United Kingdom; Evreux, France; Montrose, United Kingdom; Barnard Castle, United Kingdom; Crawley, United Kingdom; Bristol, Tennessee; King of Prussia, Pennsylvania; Zebulon, North Carolina; Cidra, Puerto Rico; Jurong Singapore and Cork, Ireland; Parma, Italy.
  • Major manufacturing sites for consumer products in Maidenhead, United Kingdom; Dungarvan, Ireland; Mississauga, Ontario; Aiken, South Carolina; Clifton, New Jersey; Memphis, Tennessee; and St. Louis, Missouri
  • GSK has a presence in over 72 countries
  • Most of the biological part of GSK is in Belgium (Wavre and Rixensart)

Breakdown of revenues

  • By Division
Pharmaceuticals: £20,078
Consumer Healthcare: £3,147
  • By Geography
USA: £10,353
France: £967
Japan: £860
UK: £788
Revenue by Therapeutic Area[24]
Therapeutic Area 2006 Sales (millions) 2005 Sales (millions) Description of Products
Respiratory £4,995 £5,054 Advair, Flovent, Serevent, Flonase
Central Nervous System £3,642 £3,219 Paxil, Wellbutrin, Imitrex, Lamictal
Anti-virals £2,827 £2,598 Combivir, Epivir, Valtrex, Zovirax
Metabolic £1,875 £1,495 Avandia, Boniva
Vaccines £1,692 £1,389 Pediariax, Boostrix
Cardiovascular £1,636 £1,331 Coreg, Levitra, Avodart,
Anti-bacterials £1,369 £1,519 Augmentin, Ceftin
Oncology £1069 £1016 Zofran, Hycamtin

Governance

Executives

  • Dr. Jean-Pierre Garnier, CEO
  • Julian Heslop, CFO
  • Rupert Bondy, Senior VP, General Counsel
  • John Clarke, President, Consumer Healthcare
  • Chris Viehbacher, President, US Pharmaceuticals
  • Dr. Moncef Slaoui, Chairman of R&D
  • David Pulman, President, Global Manufacturing and Supply
  • Dan Phelan, Senior VP, Human Resources

Board members & affiliations[25]

Executive/director compensation[26]

2006: $5,413,000

$1,700,000 salary
$3,080,000 bonus
$633,000 other compensation

Date & venue of next AGM

Archive of Reports from Past General Meetings

Labor

Number of Employees[27]
2006 2005 2004
USA 24,726 23,822 23,782
Europe 45.758 43,999 44,679
Total International 32,211 32,907 31,558
Asia Pacific 17,570 15,991 16,109
Japan 3,195 3,098 2,965
Latin America 5,856 5,664 5,603
Manufacturing 33,235 31,615 31,143
Selling 44,484 44,393 44,646
Administration 9.024 9,225 9,193
Research and Development 15,952 15,495 15,037

Political & public influence

Political contributions

GlaxoSmithKline gave $891,413 to federal candidates in the 05/06 election cycle through its political action committee (PAC) - 29% to Democrats, 70% to Republicans, and 1% to other parties. [28]

Lobbying

Traditionally, Glaxo spends several million dollars a year on lobbying, reaching a height of $5 million in 2003. However, in 2006 the company spent only $991,000 their lowest level of contribution since 1998. The lobbying was done using outside lobbying firms rather than with in-house lobbyists. Some of the firms used were Barbour, Griffith and Rogers, Dutko Worldwide, Walker Martin & Hatch, and BKSH & Associates. [29]

Total, by year:

  • 2006: $991,000
  • 2005: $4,860,000
  • 2004: $4,900,000
  • 2003: $4,950,000
  • 2002: $4,100,000

Corporate Accountability

Social responsibility initiatives

Accolades as an Employer

  • Named one of the “100 Best Companies for Working Mothers” for 15 straight years by Working Mothers Magazine.
  • Placed 3rd, in “Britain’s Top Employers” by The Guardian

CSR

In 2006, they donated £302 million in medicine, vaccines, time and equipment. Included in this is their 20-year partnership with the WHO to combat elephantiasis.

AIDS

In 2006, GSK supplied 86 million tablets of “preferentially priced” ARVs(anti-retrovirals) Combivir and Epivir. They also reduced by 30% the price of abacavir-containing ARVs. They also negotiated the eighth licensee to permit generic manufacturing of their ARVs for sale in sub-Saharan Africa.[30]

Environment & product safety

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

Sources

External resources

External articles