Panic buys a piece of his old firm
Milan Panic, founder of ICN Pharmaceuticals Inc., cherry-picked the
company’s biomedical unit Tuesday by purchasing it.
Panic, whose name is pronounced pan-ish, purchased it through his
new privately owned unit MP Biomedicals Inc. The former Yugoslavian
prime minister left ICN a year ago.
“This is an exciting opportunity for me to get back into the
industry where I started my career,” Panic said in a statement. “I
have every confidence that we will be able, by constantly enlarging
the biotechnology field which we serve, to build another highly
successful business.”
ICN Biomedicals, as it was known, had gross sales of more than $42
million in 2002, Panic said. The unit sells a catalog of chemicals to
academic institutions and the industrial clients. It is headquartered
in Irvine and employs 350 people.
While head of ICN, Panic led the development of Ribavirin, the
company’s hepatitis C treatment. However, new management swept Panic
off the board and is now suing the former chairman and chief
executive to return his part of almost $50 million in executive
bonuses paid out last year.
Panic founded ICN in 1959 with just the biomedical unit and grew
the company to a market value of almost $3 billion at one time. As of
Wednesday, it was worth $1.42 billion.
The pharmaceutical company has been on the mend, as it works
through a major restructuring plan.
Also on Tuesday, ICN announced it would begin offering a cash
dividend in the third quarter.
The company’s board said it would pay out 7 3/4cents per share to
investors on July 25 for those holding the stock July 11.
With ICN offloading a number of its assets, stock rater Standard &
Poor’s updated its report on the company, giving it a “hold” rating.
In the June 28 report, the S&P; said it expects “revenues to
decline modestly in 2003” because of the divestitures, increased
competition against Ribavirin and “sluggishness in certain specialty
pharmaceutical lines.”
In the report, S&P; predicted a 5% drop in earnings to 95 cents per
share from $1 per share in 2002.
In 1992, when Panic was head of ICN, he became prime minister of
Yugoslavia. He served for eight months, until being pushed out by
Slobodan Milosevic in 1993. Milosevic is on trial at the Hague for
war crimes in the Balkans during the 1990s.
Shares of ICN closed Thursday at $16.63, a 1.5% drop for the
trading session.
CERADYNE OFFERS A SHARE FOR INVESTORS
Advanced ceramics manufacturer Ceradyne Inc. floated 1.5 million
shares on Tuesday, with another 300,000 coming from a stockholder.
Ceradyne, based in Costa Mesa, offered the shares at $17.50,
raising $24.1 million in funding that it said would be used to reduce
the company’s debt load, expand production and purchase machinery and
equipment.
As of Wednesday, 7.5 million shares were publicly available; a
total of 8.65 million have been issued. The company was worth $156.8
million in market value.
A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. and Needham & Company Inc. underwrote the
offering. They have 30 days in which to purchase and offer up to
270,000 shares.
During the first half of the year, Ceradyne share prices rocketed
138% to close out the six-month frame at $18.60. It traded below $8
at the end of 2002.
Shares closed Thursday at $18.15 for an essentially flat close on
the day.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
paul.clinton@latimes.com.
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