Sandoz to confirm strategic roadmap and highlight pipeline catalysts at 43rd Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference

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Sandoz Group
Sandoz Group

MEDIA RELEASE

  • Strong first year as standalone company; global leader Sandoz uniquely positioned in attractive and growing USD 200 billion market for generics and biosimilars

  • Leading in home market Europe, which represents half of total sales; strategically positioning company to become #1 in biosimilars in US, with three US launches expected in 2025

  • Ambitious GLP-1 strategy in place, addressing each opportunity with mix of internal capabilities and external partnerships

  • Industry-leading pipeline for rapidly-growing biosimilar segment now comprises 28 molecules

  • Strongly positioned to capitalize on unprecedented global market opportunity, with reference medicines worth more than USD 400 billion in sales due to lose exclusivity from 2029 onwards

Basel, January 14, 2025 – Sandoz, the global leader in generic and biosimilar medicines, will confirm its strategic roadmap and highlight pipeline catalysts in a presentation today at the 43rd Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference, taking place from January 13 to 16 in San Francisco.

CEO Richard Saynor will highlight several recent additions to the global biosimilar pipeline, which now comprises 28 molecules. He will also reiterate the company’s ambition to become the leader in US biosimilars, with three US launches expected in 2025.

Richard will say: “We are proud of the progress we have made on our spin-off commitments since October 2023. Generics and biosimilars represent 80% of medicines used by patients worldwide, at 30% of the total cost. That means that, when we deliver on our promises, we create value for all. As we enter our second full year as a standalone company, we will continue to execute our purpose-driven strategy.”

Sandoz uniquely positioned to benefit from market fundamentals, aims to lead in US biosimilars
The global generics and biosimilars market is worth more than USD 200 billion in gross sales and expected to grow at an annual compound rate of 7% for the next 10 years. Growth will be driven by aging populations, higher rates of chronic disease, increasing market adoption as healthcare systems and payors seek to reduce the cost of medicines, and a consistent supply of upcoming losses of exclusivity (LoEs) as patents for reference medicines expire.

From 2029 through 2034, reference medicines worth more than USD 400 billion in sales are due to lose exclusivity, significantly more than during any comparable timeframe previously. Nearly half of this opportunity is in the biosimilar segment, while GLP-1 medicines represent by far the single largest opportunity in the generic space.