Bayer Takes Tough Stance In Glyphosate Settlement Talks Due To Downturn
The pandemic has significantly slowed the mediation process, the German drugs and pesticides company said in a statement on Monday.
“The company will consider a deal only if it is financially reasonable and puts in place a mechanism to resolve potential future claims efficiently,” Chief Executive Werner Baumann said.
“This applies now more than ever,” he added, citing a looming recession and considerable liquidity challenges as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
The number of U.S. plaintiffs blaming its glyphosate-based weedkillers for their cancer reached 52,500, up from 48,600 in February, the company added.
Bayer denies claims that Roundup – or its active ingredient glyphosate – cause cancer, saying decades of independent studies have shown it to be safe for human use.
“The economic environment could be a catalyst here,” said Ingo Speich, a fund manager at mutual fund firm Deka Investment.
“It will certainly not be easier for Bayer to agree to an expensive settlement. That should also be clear to the plaintiffs,” he added.
The company said first-quarter adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) rose 10.2% to 4.39 billion euros ($4.76 billion), surpassing average analyst expectations of 4.17 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
Bayer’s shares were up 4.5% at 62.22 euros by 1340 GMT, beating a 2.3% gain in the wider German market.
While the company would not be drawn on when and for how much it would settle, finance chief Wolfgang Nickl told an analyst call that a deal with plaintiffs is unlikely to have an impact on future dividends.
Bayer, which is due to hold its annual shareholder meeting in a virtual format on Tuesday, warned that it was unable to assess the impact of the pandemic on results this year.
The first-quarter beat was driven by a 14% gain in earnings at the agriculture division from higher sales of crop chemicals and corn seeds. Earnings were further underpinned by a 19% increase in revenue from stroke prevention drug Xarelto.
Bayer also pointed to the stockpiling of drugs as consumers purchased over-the-counter products and patients sought additional prescriptions as a safety net as the coronavirus spread.
Operating cash flow, however, fell to an outflow of 189 million euros, down from an inflow of 1 billion a year earlier, as it brought forward the settlement of agriculture payables and receivables were paid later.
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