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European Union Approves Merck Takeover of Schering-Plough

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RAF CASERT
Associated Press Writer

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union approved Merck & Co.'s proposed takeover of Schering-Plough, which would create the second-biggest global producer of prescription medicines.

The EU's antitrust authorities said in a statement Friday that the "transaction would not significantly impede effective competition" in Europe.

The $41.1 billion acquisition of smaller Schering-Plough Corp. will allow Merck to leapfrog to No. 2 worldwide in prescription medicine, just behind Pfizer Inc., which last week bought Wyeth for $68 billion. The new Merck-Schering company would have about $42.4 billion in annual sales.

"Approval from the European Commission marks a key milestone for the completion of our transaction with Schering-Plough," Merck President and CEO Richard T. Clark said in a statement.

The two companies hope to close the deal in the fourth quarter after shareholders approved it on Aug. 7. The deal still needs approval from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

The EU said the overlap would not pose significant problems in Europe even though both companies have operations in prescription pharmaceuticals.

Merck is a research-driven company that also makes vaccines, while Schering is a health care group also centering on prescription pharmaceuticals as well as over-the-counter and animal health products.

In its checks for overlaps in Europe, specifically in the areas of asthma and allergic rhinitis, the EU Commission found the products were not close competitors and that the tie-up would not prevent enough other companies from competing.

In the animal health market, concerns were assuaged when Merck sold its 50-percent share in the joint venture Merial to rival Sanofi-Aventis.

Merck and Schering-Plough have been partners for several years on the cholesterol drugs Vytorin and Zetia, but their once-surging sales have been declining steadily since January 2008.

That partnership between the New Jersey neighbors helped set up the deal. Merck really needed Schering-Plough's much stronger stable experimental drugs in development. Buying Schering-Plough gives it a strong biotech operation, more veterinary medicines and a host of well-known consumer health products such as the Coppertone sun care and Dr. Scholl's foot care lines.
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