Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

5 Things To Know About Embattled Valeant Pharmaceuticals

The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2015 11:15 AM
    Five things to know about Valeant Pharmaceuticals, which is under fire in the U.S. for some of its business practices:
     
    The company: The pharmaceutical giant, based in Laval, Que., is a publicly traded, multinational specialty drug company that focuses on neurology, dermatology and eye care. Among its subsidiaries are Bausch & Lomb and Salix Pharmaceuticals. It employs 18,000 people worldwide. In addition to its prescription drugs, Valeant's non-prescription retail brands include Cold-Fx and Swiss Natural.
     
    Trouble: Valeant was trading at a 52-week low last week after its stock fell as much as 39 per cent — prompting a brief halt in trading. That happened amid a scathing report on the drugmaker's use of specialty pharmacies on the heels of news that U.S. lawmakers were also taking a close look at the company's pricing practices.
     
    The report by Citron Research called Valeant "the pharmaceutical Enron," accusing the company of setting up phantom pharmacies to fool auditors. That was vehemently denied by CEO Michael Pearson in a conference call on Monday, who urged U.S. securities regulators to investigate Citron. He said outsiders are trying to manipulate the market for their own gain.
     
    Losses: The plummet in stock prices — which began upon word that American legislators were investigating the company — has resulted in billions of dollars of losses for Valeant shareholders. The company's shares peaked at $347.84 on Aug. 5, 2015, on the Toronto Stock Exchange.
     
    As of midday on Monday, its stock price on the TSX was $150.77, a decline of 1.9 per cent from Friday's close.
     
    Specialty pharmacies: Designed to help distribute certain drugs, including those that need constant refrigeration, they are exempt in the U.S. from reporting their sales to IMS Health, which tracks pharmaceutical sales for the industry south of the border.
     
    Drugmakers say they use the pharmacies to encourage the use of expensive drugs that insurance companies often won't cover, and they consider these mail-order outlets essential to providing people with easier access to drugs. But insurance companies beg to differ, saying they promote high-priced drugs when much cheaper alternatives are available.
     
    Interesting fact: Eugene Melnyk, the billionaire owner of the Ottawa Senators and founder of drug maker Biovail Corp., fired off his own allegations in 2014 against Valeant, the company that now controls his one-time business.
     
    Melnyk alleged that Valeant is merely posing as a Canadian company to make use of Canada's international fiscal treaties and dodge U.S. taxes. Valeant responded that it's doing nothing wrong and follows all the rules in the jurisdictions where it operates.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion
    Kacey Rogers and his girlfriend were preparing to head to bed the evening of Feb. 26, 2012, when four shotgun blasts ripped through the front door of their north Surrey home.

    Russell Atma Bidesi Found Guilty Of Manslaughter In Surrey Shooting Death During Home Invasion

    Woman Dies At Scene Near Boston Bar, B.C., After Crashing Into Tractor-Trailer

    Woman Dies At Scene Near Boston Bar, B.C., After Crashing Into Tractor-Trailer
    BOSTON BAR, B.C. — Police are investigating the death of a woman whose car collided with a tractor-trailer on Highway 1 north of Boston Bar, B.C.

    Woman Dies At Scene Near Boston Bar, B.C., After Crashing Into Tractor-Trailer

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears
    SAANICH, B.C. — More than 90 police officers are searching a parcel of land in rural Saanich, B.C., for any evidence connected to a possible murder.

    Dozens Of Police Officers Searching Site Almost A Year After B.C. Man Disappears

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer
    Vancouver police refused to clean up their act even after reports of feces, vomit and blood smeared across jail-cell walls led a British Columbia judge to demand more hygienic lockup conditions for two prisoners, says a lawyer.

    Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills
    BURNABY, B.C. — Kinder Morgan is pledging to protect against any threat of oil spills caused by its Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, as opposition to the project mounts in British Columbia.

    Kinder Morgan Says $100-million Investment Will Protect Against Oil Spills

    Mount Polley Mine Could Reopen By End Of Month: B.C. Mines Minister

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's energy and mines minister says a gold and copper mine that suffered a disastrous tailings pond collapse last summer could be back up and running by the end of the month.

    Mount Polley Mine Could Reopen By End Of Month: B.C. Mines Minister