MADISON: Revolutionary change and the Indiana way
Are there Hoosiers still waiting for 1950s-type manufacturing jobs or another Milan miracle?
Are there Hoosiers still waiting for 1950s-type manufacturing jobs or another Milan miracle?
Eli Lilly and Co. CEO John Lechleiter keeps pouring more money into research and development, even as analysts note the payoff of such spending has dropped off 70 percent in the last decade.
In 2011, large-capitalization, high-quality U.S. stocks significantly outperformed small-company stocks.
Eli Lilly and Co. has won approval of a $4.5 million settlement with five union health funds and an insurer that alleged improper marketing of the company's best-selling medication, Zyprexa, raised their costs.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. is now in the predicament of watching revenue fall as its patents on older products expire, even as the company needs to spend more money on marketing and research to boost sales of new drugs.
Fifty-three women from around the country are suing drug companies, including Eli Lilly and Co., who made and promoted DES for millions of pregnant women from about 1938 to the early 1970s.
David Simon's massive new compensation plan—which includes a $120 million long-term bonus—is a drop in the bucket compared with the wealth the company has been creating in recent years, even as the overall market zigs and zags.
Eli Lilly and Co. has sued Biogen Idec Inc. in a London court to revoke a European patent on a potential treatment for immune-system diseases.
Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. provided a 2012 earnings forecast Thursday morning that missed analyst estimates by a wide margin, sending shares down.
Lawmakers are wasting their time if they spend a single minute on anything but bills meant to improve business conditions.
Eli Lilly and Co., after more than a decade of setbacks, is counting on diabetes to help it survive a string of patent losses on other products that have begun to sap the drugmaker’s sales.
Quarterly sales rose at Warsaw-based Biomet Inc., lifting investors’ sentiment that the recession-induced slowdown in orthopedic surgeries may be ending. Biomet, one of the largest makers of orthopedic implants, reported sales of $725.1 million in the three months ended Nov. 30, a 4-percent increase over the same quarter a year ago. Excluding foreign currency fluctuations, Biomet’s sales would have risen 3 percent. Still, investors took it as a positive sign for the industry, trading up the shares of other orthopedics companies, including Warsaw-based Zimmer Holdings Inc. and Michigan-based Stryker Corp. “We would view the Biomet large joint reconstruction results with cautious optimism for the broader hip and knee markets,” Derrick Sung, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., told investors Dec. 20, according to Bloomberg News. “Investors are generally pricing in no expectation for an orthopedic market recovery in 2012, so we would view any signs of such as incrementally positive for Stryker and Zimmer, the pure-play orthopedic companies.” Biomet reported that sales of its knee implants rose 2 percent worldwide, while sales of hip implants rose 7 percent, and sales of its sports, extremity and trauma implants rose 13 percent. Biomet’s figures are preliminary, and the company has not yet reported its quarterly profits.
Zimmer Holdings Inc. will start giving its shareholders a dividend in the first quarter of 2012. The Warsaw-based maker of orthopedic implants will dole out 18 cents for each share of its common stock held on March 30. Zimmer also announced that it will buy back $1.5 billion of its own stock between now and the end of 2014. Zimmer is trying to make its stock more attractive after the economy forced many patients to put off elective orthopedic surgeries. Zimmer’s share price has been stuck between $50 and $60 for most of the past two years, even though it neared $70 earlier this year. Zimmer had $553 million in cash and cash equivalents as of Sept. 30.
Eli Lilly and Co. was one of the drug firms stung by an illegal importation ring, based in Houston, which sold copies of erectile dysfunction drugs as the real thing. According to the Houston Chronicle, the ring was led by an illegal immigrant from Pakistan named Irfan Qadir, who was recently sentenced to 13 months in prison and ordered to pay about $140,000 in restitution to pharmaceutical Indianapolis-based Lilly and to New York-based Pfizer. Lilly makes the impotence pill Cialis and Pfizer makes Viagra. In the six months leading up to his May arrest, Qadir received about 8,000 pills of those two drugs, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
The economy may be stuck in the doldrums, but government and the private sector are continuing to make huge investments aimed at strengthening the region's future. Check out IBJ‘s complete year-in-review coverage, including a photo gallery, reader poll and A&E recap.
Eli Lilly and Co. lost patent protection on its $5-billion-a-year best-seller Zyprexa in October, plunging the company into the long-awaited zone of uncertainty that it calls “Years YZ.”
The aircraft-engine maker will occupy Eli Lilly and Co.’s former Faris Campus on South Meridian Street, which is being renamed the Rolls-Royce Meridian Center.
The administration of Mayor Greg Ballard found its stride in the final year of its first four-year term, at least when it comes to major publicly supported real estate projects.
A contentious battle for Indianapolis mayor culminated in a second term for Republican Mayor Greg Ballard, who won the race with 51 percent of the vote. His Democratic challenger, Melina Kennedy, garnered 47 percent.