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![]() Gedeon Richter Headquarters inBudapest | |
Company type | Public |
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BPSE: RICHTER BUX Component | |
Industry | Biotechnology Pharmaceuticals |
Founded | 1901 |
Founder | Gedeon Richter |
Headquarters | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Erik Bogsch(Chairman) Gábor Orbán (CEO) |
Products | Medicines Pharmaceuticals |
Revenue | ![]() |
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Total assets | ![]() |
Total equity | ![]() (on 288.9USD/HUF) |
Number of employees | 12,696 (2018) |
Subsidiaries | Helm BioTec Medimpex Preglem |
Website | www.gedeonrichter.com |
Footnotes / references [1][2] |
Gedeon Richter Plc. is aEuropeanmultinationalpharmaceutical andbiotechnology company headquartered inBudapest. It is the largest pharmaceutical company inCentral and Eastern Europe, with an expanding direct presence inWestern Europe,China,Northern America andLatin America. Richter has the largestR&D unit inCentral and Eastern Europe and operations in over 100 countries.[3][4][5][6][7][8]
Gedeon Richter Plc. has a primary listing on theBudapest Stock Exchange and is a constituent of theBUX Index. It had amarket capitalisation of approximately $6.6 billion as of 2018, the third largest of companies with a primary listing on the Budapest Stock Exchange. It has secondary listings on theLuxembourg Stock Exchange.[9]
Richter sells products for thecentral nervous system,women's health andcardiovascular therapeutic areas among others. The company is also active inbiosimilar product development.[10] The company was established in Budapest byGedeon Richter (1872–1944), apharmacist, in 1901.
In 1901, the pharmacistGedeon Richter founded the company, when he first received a license to industrially produce medicines.[11]
Initially, small-scale pharmaceutical production took place in the Arany Sas (Golden Eagle) Pharmacy, which still operates today. At the time pharmaceutical production on an industrial scale required heavy investments, and large-scale pharmaceutical manufacturing activities were considered to be extremely capital-intensive operations. Initially, the laboratory processed extracts from organs of animals and produced organotherapeutic drugs.
The plant was built in 1907 in theKőbánya suburb ofBudapest and was Hungary's first pharmaceutical manufacturing plant and regarded as an outstanding technological achievement in its day. In compliance with the established international trends of the pharmaceutical industry in those days, the company produced herbal drugs, processed extracts from plants and manufactured synthetic products at a later date. The company became a highly recognized manufacturer oflecithin products, antiseptic and febrifuge products, as well aspainkillers (Hyperol,Kalmopyrin, and Tonogen, which continue to be in use). In 1934, Constant Janssen, of the futureJanssen Pharmaceuticals, acquired the distribution rights for Gedeon Richter's products.[12]
The company was nationalized in 1948 and remained fully state-owned until 1994.[13]
In the 1970s, chemists at the Gedeon Richter Chemical Works in Budapest discovered the brain enhancing drugvinpocetine,[14] which continues to be used in treatment of cerebrovascular disorders.[15]
In 1995 Gedeon Richter signed a contract withDanco Laboratories to market an abortion pillmifepristone inthe USA. Danco resolved to contracting Gedeon, because its prior attempts to find a US distributor failed due to "the politically volatile climate surrounding abortion in this country [the USA]."[16] Facing a strong opposition from the USpro-life groups, Gedeon decided in 1997 to end its efforts to placemifepristone on the U.S. market. On May 9, 1997 Danco filed a lawsuit against Gedeon, because they lost over $200 million due to the Gedeon'sbreach of contract.[17]
In May 2006 Gedeon Richter signed a development and supply agreement with the US-based companyRepros Therapeutics to produceProellex.[18] In July 2007 Gedeon Richter signed a contract withBarr Pharma for the production ofNovartis Lamisil. Barr paid Gedeon Richter a royalty for distributing the product in the U.S.[19]
From July 2008 - April 2012, the company constructed a new manufacturing facility ($110 million) in Debrecen.[20]
In October 2010, Gedeon Richter acquired 100% of a private Swiss biopharmaceutical company, PregLem, forCHF 445 million (€337 million).[21] PregLem is focused on the treatment of gynecological conditions and infertility.[22]
In 2015,Stada Arzneimittel AG and Gedeon Richter signed a license and distribution agreement to commercialize Richter's biosimilarPegfilgrastim in Europe. According to the agreement Stada receives non-exclusive distribution rights for the area of geographical Europe (excluding Russia), while Richter retains its rights to distribute and market biosimilar Pegfilgrastim worldwide.[23]
In January 2017,William de Gelsey resigned as chairman of the board of Gedeon Richter. He was replaced by former CEO Erik Bogsch, who served as a chief executive officer of Gedeon Richter from 1992 to November 2017.[24] As the new chief executive officer he appointed Gabor Orban, a former fund manager, government official and Bogsch's deputy since 2016. De Gelsey remained to be a member of the board until his passing.[25][26]
In April 2017, Evestra signed a collaboration partnership agreement with Gedeon Richter.[27] In February 2019, Gedeon Richter and Pantarhei Bioscience signed a license and supply agreement for the commercialization of a novel combined oral contraceptive.[28]
In September 2018 the company started collaborating with the companyMithra Pharmaceuticals [fr] to distribut its contraceptive,Estelle, in Europe and Russia.[29]
Richter's atypical antipsychotic, Reagila, containing the active ingredient cariprazine, was awarded the prize of Medicine of the Year 2019 by the Hungarian Society for Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology (MFT).
The company has been criticized for continuing to operate in Russia despite the war in Ukraine. Some people have called for the company to stop its operations in Russia, but Gedeon Richter continues to operate in Russia.[30]
Gedeon Richter has various subsidiaries in different countries: Gedeon Richter Polska, Gedeon Richter Romania and Gedeon Richter RUS are regional production subsidiaries. Richter-Themis Medicare (India) (51% Gedeon Richter, 49% Themis), Richter-Helm BioLogics and BioTec (Germany), Mediplus N.V. (Curaçao), Gedeon Richter Mexico, S.A.P.I. de C.V., Gedeon Richter Do Brasil Importadora, Exportadora E Distribuidora S.A. and Gedeon Richter Columbia S.A.S. are international subsidiaries in production and distribution.[31]
The company's chief governing body is the board of directors. The board's chairman is Erik Bogsch, who had served as chief executive officer since 1992 and was succeeded by Gábor Orbán as CEO in November 2017.[25][26] The board members areGábor Gulácsi,János Csák,Dr. Ilona Hardy,Dr. György Bagdy,Csaba Lantos,Anett Pandurics,Bálint Szécsényi,Prof Dr Szilveszter E. Vizi, Dr.Kriszta Zolnay.[24]
The company's other governing bodies are the executive board and the supervisory board.The executive board is led by Erik Bogsch. Other members are Gábor Orbán, Gábor Gulácsi, István Greiner, Tibor Horváth, György Thaler.[32]
The supervisory board is led by Róbert Jonathán Bedros. Other members are Attila Chikán, Klára Csikós Kovácsné, Zsolt Harmath, Éva Kozsda Kovácsné andDale A. Martin.[33]
As of December 31, 2018, Gedeon Richter's shareholder structure is:[9]
In 2018 the dividends approved by the shareholders of Gedeon Richter wereEUR 41 million in total.[34]
The corporation has two plants today: the headquarters in Budapest, and a subsidiary inDorog which has been operating since 1967.The company hasjoint ventures in India with Themis Medicare,[35] and in Germany, with Helm AG.[35]In 2012, the company opened a biotechnology plant inDebrecen.
In 2017, Gedeon Richter was recognized by the Hungarian Innovation Foundation with the Innovation Grand Prize for the development of Cariprazine, an antipsychotic drug which is used in the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorders.[36]
In 2006, Gedeon Richter gifted a large sum to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), thereby establishing the IUPAC–Richter Prize in Medicinal Chemistry. The $10,000 prize is awarded every second year to an internationally recognized scientist (normally a medicinal chemist), whose research or publications have made a significant contribution to the practice of medicinal chemistry. The prize was initiated to honor and highlight the central role of medicinal chemistry in improving human health.[37]
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