Showing posts with label Pfizer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pfizer. Show all posts

Monday, August 01, 2011

Is China's Anti-Monopoly Law Used To Get Hold Of Foreign IP?

Anti-Monopoly Law to level the playing field ...
or annexing the players?
Photo: Danny Friedmann
Today, exactly three years ago (2008), China's Anti-monopoly Law went into effect. Since that time the Ministry of Commerce's Anti-Monopoly Bureau has approved seven M&As conditionally of which one is most relevant in regard to IP:
  • InBev - Anheuser Busch
  • GM - Delphi
  • Mitsubishi Rayon - Lucite
  • Pfizer - Wyeth
  • Novartis AG - Alcon
  • Sanyo - Panasonic
  • Uralkali - Silvinit
And there was one rejection. When Coca-Cola company wanted to acquire Huiyuan Juice Group in March 2009, for around 2.4 billion US dollar, the Anti-Monopoly Bureau rejected its application, because according to Anti-Monopoly Bureau:
"If the acquisition of Huiyuan went into effect, Coca-Cola was very likely to take a dominating position in the domestic market and the consumers may have to accept the high price fixed by the company as they don't have more choices." Read here.


Since that time the Ministry of Commerce did not reject any M&A. But in some cases they did give some conditions. The title of Simon Rabinovitch' article for the FT is 'China Becomes Hurdle To Global Mergers' is provocative. Mr Rabinovitch quotes Gerry O'Brien of Mayer Brown JSM in Hong Kong: “There is some concern about the potential for such orders to be used as a mechanism to transfer important businesses or assets or intellectual property to Chinese enterprises away from foreign firms.” Read more here.

Let's explore Mr O'Brien's idea. When Pfizer wanted to take-over Wyeth on the Mainland for 64 billion US dollar, it got China's blessings only if it divested its Pfizer swine flue vaccine (mycoplasma hyopneumoniae) RespiSure and RespiSure One in China (not Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan), so it can still sell it's Wyeth vaccine in China.

Steven Wei Su of Guo Lian PRC Lawyers reports on the Anti-Monopoly Bureau decision: "MOFCOM found that the merged entity would have a combined market share of 49.4% in the market, which is significantly higher than that of the next competitor in the market, Intervet, holding 18.35% of the market and other competitors, of which each holds less than 10%." Mr Su's analysis can be found here.

How to exactly assess market concentration remains less than transparent. Therefore Ministry of Commerce has issued a draft for comment on the 'Tentative Provisions on Assessment of the Effects of Concentrations of Business Operators on Competition', June 13, 2011. John Grobowski, Yiqiang Li and Wendy Yan of Faegre and Benson LLP in Shanghai analysed the procedures here.

Sundeep Tucker reported last May 2011 on the Pfizer-Wyeth deal for the FT, see here. Matthew Murphy of MMLC Group gives all 7 conditions of the Anti-Monopoly Bureau here.

It is hard to give a conclusive answer if the concern for IP abusive use of China's Anti-Monopoly Law is legitimate. Also in the case of Pfizer-Wyeth the intellectual property was only partly transferred away from foreign firms. The company to which Pfizer sold its intellectual property rights for the swine flue vaccine was Harbin. Harbin may well be majority owned by the provincial government, but Warburg Pincus, a US private equity fund, has a 22.5 percent stake in it. China's Anti-Monopoly Law and the Anti-Monopoly Bureau are pretty new and China's efforts to make the assessment of market concentration more transparent is laudable. So far they deserve the benefit of the doubt.  
continue reading ...

Friday, April 22, 2011

Pfizer Starts R&D in China After IPR in China Challenges

Photo Danny Friedmann
Perilous hills, but nice view.
Climb worth the risk?
As one of the first U.S. companies pharmaceutical giant Pfizer has decided to start doing R&D in China. This way the company can probably take advantage of indigenous innovation preferential rules if it invents and patents in China. Read here.

Pfizer had some IP challenges in China. To brush up your memory, here is a summary of how Pfizer bot back its Viagra patent:
  • September 19, 2001 SIPO granted a patent for Viagra's active ingredient;
  • A dozen Chinese pharmaceutical companies file a petition to invalidate the patent, alledging that it failed adequate disclosure under article 26 Patent Law (at the time Patent Law 2000) and lacked novelty as required by article 22 Patent Law (at the time Patent Law 2000);
  • July 7, 2004 Patent Reexamination Board invalidated Pfizer's Viagra patent because it failed to meet the disclosure requirement;
  • September 28, 2004, Pfizer appealed the Patent Reexamination Board's decision at the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court;
  • June 2006 Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court reversed the invalidation and remanded the case to SIPO for further determinations;
  • The Chinese pharmaceutical companies appealed to the Beijing High People's Court;
  • September 7, 2007 Beijing High People's Court upheld the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court.
continue reading ...

Friday, December 29, 2006

FA Premier League Against Trademark Infringers 1:0

Sarah Butler reported for the Times Online about two rulings by the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court:

The English FA (football association, nowadays called after their sponsor: Barclays) Premier League was victorious in a trademark dispute with Xiangshi Celebration Service Company, based in Jiangsu province. Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court upheld an earlier ruling that FA Premier League has the exclusive use of its crowned lion logo in China. Xiangshi Celebration Service Company must stop using a similar lion trademark, minus the football under the lion's claw.

The dispute began in 1999, when Xiangshi registered its version of the trademark. When the Premier League tried to register its logo in China in 2000, it was rejected. It won an appeal a year later.

Also this week the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court ruled that Beijing Health New Concept Pharmacy Company and Lianhuan Pharmaceutical Company, based in Jiangsu infringed upon Pfizer's Viagra patent. The court ordered to stop sales of generic blue pills similar to Viagra and to pay Pfizer 300,000 yuan (£19,500) in damages.
Read Butler's article here.
continue reading ...

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Pfizer Accuses Guangzhou Welman Of Copyright Infringement

Pfizer sued Guangzhou Welman for alleged copyright infringement of Viagra reports Forbes.

I wonder why Pfizer's allegations focused on copyright infringement instead of patent infringement, or both. Or is copyright used mistakingly as the prototype of an intellectual property? Read more here

In 2001 Pfizer obtained a Chinese patent license for Viagra
July 2004 SIPO's Patent Review Board revoked its license after complaints by 12 Chinese pharmaceutical companies: Pfizer failed to accurately explain the uses of the pill's key ingredient, sildenafil citrate.
June 2, 2006 the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate People's Court reversed the review board's verdict and upheld Pfizer's patent. Read more here.
12 Chinese pharmaceutical firms have launched an appeal against this ruling. Read more here.
continue reading ...