driver
- 30 Mar 2006 17:03
laurie squash
- 28 Oct 2006 10:26
- 361 of 1180
You can't take 4.5p anyway smiler you'd be short of target!
I will though!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
smiler o
- 28 Oct 2006 10:29
- 362 of 1180
it will soon be xmas..... I would take 3p :)
smiler o
- 28 Oct 2006 12:53
- 363 of 1180
Driver, I went across to the Dark side to find out about the rumour PH not about I think your right,load of TOSH ! :) see what happens next week !
smiler o
- 29 Oct 2006 18:54
- 364 of 1180
Could be a good few weeks ahead for erx holders :))
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 09:08
- 365 of 1180
driver, a few small B trades this am ? some very small 40 ???
potatohead
- 30 Oct 2006 09:33
- 366 of 1180
brokers begging for stock.. nearly every buy a B trade, I think takeover is a foot
Marcel1970
- 30 Oct 2006 09:40
- 367 of 1180
Can only buy 7500 shares online which seems a stupid amount so perhaps something good may happen!!!!
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 09:42
- 368 of 1180
Pot head, that thread on the dark side is MAD !! I think that the takeover is just speculation and Ramping on the ADV site !! :) wheres the proof !!
Marcel1970
- 30 Oct 2006 09:44
- 369 of 1180
Does anyone know how long it could be before they have to confirm any milestone due them?
Marcel1970
- 30 Oct 2006 11:39
- 370 of 1180
Down 12% can't see why!!!!
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 11:44
- 371 of 1180
May be just a bit of a shake up to get some stock ?? :)
Marcel1970
- 30 Oct 2006 11:44
- 372 of 1180
Also can only buy 100000 online does anyone know why you can only buy such a small amount when the share price has dropped?
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 11:53
- 373 of 1180
Marcel, as I said it could be the MMs after stock ! :)
potatohead
- 30 Oct 2006 12:00
- 374 of 1180
French pharmaceutical company to invest up to E185 million in R&D
Release date: 27 Oct 2006
The investment by the French pharmaceutical company, Servier, of between 115 million and 185 million in research and production signals its long-term commitment to Ireland, writes Lara Marlowe in The Irish Times, October 27.
Servier established a plant in Arklow, Co Wicklow, in November 1989 which now supplies medicines for the company's Canadian, European, South African and Australian markets.
Today, the company will announce a 70 million investment that will double its capacity in order to keep pace with demand.
By 2010, Arklow will produce 140 million boxes of medicine each year.
Servier is also investing E45 million in a plant at the Belview industrial estate on the Kilkenny/ Waterford border that will produce active pharmaceutical ingredients for three new Servier products: Ivabradine (whose market name is Procoralan), which regulates heart rhythm; the anti-depressant Agomelatine (Valdoxan) and Terutroban, which protects the walls of the arteries.
Servier says it is 'almost certain, depending on the evolution of the market,' that his company will decide early next year to invest a further E55 million-E70 million at Belview - to manufacture Strontium Ranelate (Protelos), a drug invented by Servier laboratories to stop osteoporosis in post-menopausal women. The site would employ 155 people by 2014.
The manufacturing plants are not the French company's only involvement with Ireland.
Yesterday, October 26, French scientist Dr Marc Devocelle, a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, received the E10,000 Dr Jacques Servier prize.
The two-year-old prize is one example of Servier's constant emphasis on research. The firm has invented 30 new medicines in as many years and recycles 25 per cent of its turnover back into research - double the average for the industry in France.
Servier already conducts research in Ireland through individual contracts with the Conway Institute at University College Dublin. The company has even established the Servier chair of molecular pharmacology, currently held by Eoin O'Brien.
Servier's intention to further strengthen research activity in Ireland coincides with the Taoiseach's recent announcement of a multibillion euro investment in research in coming years.
'Twenty years ago, no one thought of Ireland as a country for research,' Servier says. 'The Irish have made an extraordinary effort, even more impressive than Canada's.
'Research creates good jobs and it is unlimited. Medical research cannot satisfy needs for at least another century. It's the discovery of new products that keeps a laboratory alive.'
Last summer, executives from Servier met Minister of Health and Children, Mary Harney.
'She wanted to show how keen the Irish Government is to develop medical research in Ireland,' says Christian Bazantay, the secretary general of Servier, who looks after much of the daily running of the company for Servier.
'Ireland is a country that likes the pharmaceutical industry, that is proud to have a highly developed pharmaceutical sector. All the big laboratories are present in Ireland.'
A glance through statistics provided by IDA Ireland shows how significant a part of the economy pharmaceutical companies have become.
Thirteen of the world's top 15 pharmaceutical companies have substantial operations in Ireland. There are 83 foreign-owned pharmaceutical facilities in Ireland. The sector employs 17,000 people and had a production value of E34 billion in 2002.
Servier compares Ireland to Switzerland. 'The Swiss have had the same policy towards pharmaceuticals since the time of the French Revolution,' he says.
'It's been a complete success, a considerable, reliable source of wealth. Ireland and Switzerland are both countries with few natural resources but talented populations.'
Servier established the Arklow plant in 1989.
'Our clients didn't like the fact that everything was manufactured in France,' Servier adds. 'They were afraid of another world war or a revolution.
'Among the prejudices about France, there is always the image of a revolutionary country. They wanted a peaceful country, which is why we thought of going to Ireland, a neutral country and what was more, an island.'
The company was also seduced by IDA Ireland, which took Servier and Bazantay on a tour of 200 sites, including a salmon-stocked river near a ruined castle, so beautiful that Servier refused to build a plant there. The IDA arranged appointments with high-ranking officials and negotiated a grant agreement, which subsidised the creation of Irish jobs.
Servier says Ireland's 12.5 per cent corporate tax rate 'wasn't what made up our minds, even if it was pleasant' - especially when compared with the 33 per cent rate in France.
He admits his company considered the zero corporate tax offered by Estonia, but found the language and small population an obstacle.
'When we're happy in a country, that comes before everything else,' he says. 'I don't want to tempt fate, but I think we would stay in Ireland (even if the corporate tax rate changed and the IDA stopped grants).'
Another advantage of working in Ireland is the relative absence of what Servier calls 'red tape' or dirigisme.
After a new medicine is registered, the pharmaceutical company negotiates its price with the Government. In Ireland, the process takes three months; in France, Italy and Spain, it takes more than a year.
Only recently, Servier says, has the French government realised the importance of investing more in research and helping rather than hindering its pharmaceutical industry, the biggest in Europe.
Pharmaceuticals are a slow industry that is forced to work fast. 'We apply for a patent the day we discover a molecule,' Servier explains.
'It then takes 12 years to develop the product, which leaves only eight years of exclusive rights until the patent runs out and we are into price competition. One year out of eight is a huge amount of time to lose.'
He says his decision, half a century ago, to turn Servier into a foundation, is the way of the future.
'I was always alarmed at the difficulties encountered on the stock market by companies in slow professions like ours,' he explains. 'We have never had to pay dividends, so we can reinvest our profits in research.
'If you have pension funds as shareholders, you are under pressure to pay high dividends. This western financial system was fabulous, because it made it possible to build railroads, ports and cities. But it's outdated for industries with a long lead time.'
Source: The Irish Times, October 27
potatohead
- 30 Oct 2006 12:42
- 375 of 1180
I wonder if its the whole 165mil euro that we are getting, or just a percentage
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 12:48
- 376 of 1180
Pot Head chill out ! if erx were going to get 165 mil euro i would think by now the sp would be a bit better dont you !! just wait for the facts, who knows !! :)
Marcel1970
- 30 Oct 2006 12:51
- 377 of 1180
Smiler o
I can't understand your thinking all that dropping the price does is increase people to buy more shares as your see from this mornig.
smiler o
- 30 Oct 2006 13:01
- 378 of 1180
Marcel, I agree although it could just be a MM mind game ? but this share over the last 2 weeks has been up and down a fair bit so not to worried, :)
potatohead
- 30 Oct 2006 13:04
- 379 of 1180
its been tipped twice iver the two weeks in the Express and the FT..
Brokers have it down as strong buy..
cash coming soon, and lots of it
NS
- 30 Oct 2006 13:26
- 380 of 1180
Marcel,
I can only get 25,000 online at the moment ???