Trump Vows US Drug Price Cuts Of Up To 80% In Pharma Industry Blow

Shares in US drugmakers dropped before the official open on trading in New York, with Eli Lilly & Co., Pfizer Inc., Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and Merck & Co. Inc. all down.

President Donald Trump said he plans to order a cut in US prescription drug costs by mandating that Americans pay no more than people in countries that have the lowest price. Shares of pharmaceutical companies fell worldwide.

In a social media post, Trump said he’ll sign an executive order at 9 a.m. Monday in Washington to institute what he called a most-favored nation policy. While he didn’t give details, investors grappled with the potential implications for the world’s largest pharmaceutical market.

Trump said his plan would see the US “pay the same price as the Nation that pays the lowest price anywhere in the World.” Predicting that pharmaceutical prices could drop 30% to 80% in the US, Trump also said prices would likely “rise throughout the World in order to equalize and, for the first time in many years, bring FAIRNESS TO AMERICA!”

Shares in US drugmakers dropped before the official open on trading in New York, with Eli Lilly & Co., Pfizer Inc., Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and Merck & Co. Inc. all down. European drugmakers including Novo Nordisk A/S, Sanofi SA and AstraZeneca Plc slid, missing out on a broader market rally, while in Asia, the pharmaceuticals subgroup in Japan’s Topix Index posted its biggest one-day loss since August.

Also Read: Bullish Sign For S&P 500 Flashes With More US Stocks Shouldering Rally

Few Details

Americans pay the most in the world for medicines, fueling innovation and driving the growth of the pharmaceutical industry. Drugmakers have said revamping the system will slash revenue and stifle the development of breakthrough therapies that have the potential to lengthen and improve lives.

Trump cited the industry’s argument, but said it meant that “the ‘suckers’ of America” ended up bearing those costs “for no reason whatsoever.”

The US government already negotiates prices for some of the highest-cost medicines used in Medicare health insurance under the Inflation Reduction Act, which passed in 2022 under former President Joe Biden, with more slated to be added every year. The first two rounds of drug price' negotiations haven’t included physician-administered drugs, but the next round might.

Trump’s Truth Social post — preceded by an earlier one that promised “one of the most important and impactful” posts he has ever issued — didn’t offer specifics on the order. 

He also didn’t outline potential limits on the policy, such as whether it would apply only to government programs such as Medicare or Medicaid, if it would be limited to certain drugs or categories of drugs or if the White House sees a way to apply this more broadly. 

While it’s still unclear which drug companies will be affected by the executive order, investors are most worried about blockbuster drugs in Medicare Part-B and drugs serving large Medicaid populations, according to Jared Holz, a health-care strategist at Mizuho Securities USA LLC.

Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman suggested Trump might have been inspired by an idea he floated on X in March, when he said the best way to reduce US drug prices “is to make it illegal for drug companies to sell the same drugs abroad for lower prices than they sell them for here.”

In his first term, Trump proposed a Medicare pilot program for drugs with no low-cost generic competition that are given in doctor’s offices, saying he wanted to bring prices in line with countries like France and Japan where they cost dramatically less. 

That plan, which would have phased in over three years, aimed to ensure Medicare paid the lowest price offered to a group of 22 nations.

The effort was struck down in federal court after drug companies challenged it, claiming the administration hadn’t properly carried out the rulemaking process. The Biden administration didn’t appeal that finding, and instead pursued legislation that led to the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The latest proposal may also face difficulties, according to analysts.

“There is no easy way forward, as the executive order needs to be passed by the Senate to become legislation,” Cui Cui, an analyst at Jefferies, wrote in a note. The plan is expected to face pushback from both the Senate as well as the industry, she wrote.

Also Read: Trump Seeks To Align US Drug Costs With Cheapest Ones Abroad

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