Categories: Life Sciences

QLT spikes after announcing Auxilium Pharmaceuticals will acquire it

Vancouver’s QLT will now be known as “New Auxilium”. Shares of Vancouver-based QLT Inc. (TSX:QLT) are up today after announcing it had signed a definitive agreement to merge with specialty biopharma Auxilium.

The new company will assume Auxilium’s headquarters in Pennsylvania. Although QLT will delist from the TSX, it will remain incorporated in British Columbia and will be renamed “New Auxilium”.

QLT Chairman Jason Aryeh commented on the deal.

“We believe that this is an excellent transaction for QLT shareholders and provides them with the opportunity to benefit from the potential upside of the combined company,” he said. “We believe that Adrian Adams and the Auxilium team have proven their ability to execute and deliver on a strategy for providing quality specialty biopharmaceutical products to fill significant unmet medical needs around the world. I am confident that under their leadership, and with the advantages presented by our combined organization, this transaction will leave the merged company well positioned to achieve sustained growth.”

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

This article is brought to you by Revive Therapeutics (TSXV:RVV). Click here to learn how Revive repurposes drugs for treatments in sleep apnea, gout and rare diseases.

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Founded in 1981 as Quadra Logic Technologies, QLT went public in 1986 at $2.50 per share. In 2000, the year QLT received FDA approval for macular degeneration treatment Visudyne, the company’s shares soared to over $100 a share. But things came crashing back to earth after Visudyne brought in less revenue than anticipated, and shares of QLT fell to just over the $2 mark in 2009, before a modest rebound. The treatment remained a disappointment, numbers-wise, before the U.S. rights were sold to Valeant Pharmaceuticals for $62.5 million in September of 2012.

At press time, shares of QLT on the TSX were up 15.5% to $6.70.

__

We Hate Paywalls Too!

At Cantech Letter we prize independent journalism like you do. And we don't care for paywalls and popups and all that noise That's why we need your support. If you value getting your daily information from the experts, won't you help us? No donation is too small.

Make a one-time or recurring donation

Tagged with: qlt
Nick Waddell

Cantech Letter founder and editor Nick Waddell has lived in five Canadian provinces and is proud of his country's often overlooked contributions to the world of science and technology. Waddell takes a regular shift on the Canadian media circuit, making appearances on CTV, CBC and BNN, and contributing to publications such as Canadian Business and Business Insider.

Recent Posts

Should you buy AMZN? (May, 2024)

Following the company's first quarter results, Roth MKM analyst Rohit Kulkarni has maintained his "Buy" rating on Amazon (Amazon Stock… [Read More]

12 hours ago

These cannabis stocks will benefit most from reclassification

It happened. The move that everyone in the cannabis sector was hoping for came about swiftly on the last day… [Read More]

19 hours ago

Is AMD stock a buy? (May, 2024)

Following the company's first quarter results, Roth MKM analyst Suji Desilva has maintained his "Buy" rating on Advanced Micro Devices… [Read More]

19 hours ago

Is Wolfspeed stock still a buy?

Ahead of the company's third quarter results, Roth MKM analyst Scott Irwin has maintained his "Buy" rating on Wolfspeed (Wolfspeed… [Read More]

20 hours ago

WELL Health inks five-year deal with Microsoft

It's become one of the biggest players in the Canadian healthcare space, now WELL Health (WELL Health Stock Quote, Chart,… [Read More]

2 days ago

Is Thomson Reuters stock a buy right now?

Its stock has made a since last October, but is there more upside left in Thomson Reuters (Thomson Reuters Stock… [Read More]

2 days ago