Search This Blog

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Emergent Gets $100 Million Asset-Backed Loan Facility

 Emergent BioSolutions Inc. (NYSE: EBS) announced today that it entered into a new credit agreement on September 30, 2024 providing for an asset-based revolving loan facility (ABL) with the lenders party thereto and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as administrative agent. The credit agreement provides for revolving loan commitments in an aggregate principal amount up to $100 million (availability is based on a borrowing base set forth therein) with a fixed maturity date of September 30, 2029, subject to early maturity triggers based on the maturity of its other material indebtedness. The new credit facility brings additional liquidity to support Emergent’s multi-year transformation plan. As of September 30, 2024, Emergent had a cash balance of approximately $150 million and undrawn access to $100 million under the ABL.

“We are pleased to have successfully closed on our new ABL credit facility with favorable terms and an extended maturity, which is further evidence of Emergent’s strengthened balance sheet and financial position,” said Joe Papa, president and CEO, Emergent. “As we continue to execute on our multi-year transformation plan, we have made significant progress on our stabilization efforts to date, all while staying the course on strategic goals, to deliver long-term value and sustainable growth in the future.”

This agreement follows Emergent’s September 3, 2024 announcement that it successfully refinanced its debt and closed a new credit facility agreement with Oak Hill Advisors for a term loan of up to $250 million.

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2024/10/02/2956856/33240/en/Emergent-BioSolutions-Announces-Closing-of-100-Million-Asset-Backed-Loan-Facility.html

'US CDC warns of overdose risk from fake prescription medicines online'

 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday alerted public health officials and clinicians about the potential risk for drug overdose among individuals ordering counterfeit prescription medicines from online pharmacies.

The counterfeit pills sold through illegal internet-based pharmacies frequently contain fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that is the leading cause of drug overdoses in the United States, the health agency said.

Nearly 95% of websites offering prescription drugs online operate illegally, the CDC said, citing data from the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.

The U.S. Department of Justice on Monday pressed charges against certain illegal online pharmacies selling counterfeit prescription pills to tens of thousands of individuals in the United States.

The CDC urged individuals to be cautious of online pharmacies that operate without a license, do not require a doctor's prescription and offer deep discounts.

https://gazette.com/news/us-world/us-cdc-warns-of-public-health-risk-from-counterfeit-prescription-medicines-available-online/article_f271cd3b-b58a-5c30-bf14-37500b442ff7.html

US Medicare issues updated rules for second round of drug negotiations

 The U.S. government will provide more time for negotiations and more chances for drugmakers to submit counter offers during the second round of talks over price cuts for its Medicare program, it said on Wednesday.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which oversees Medicare, the government health insurance program for millions of Americans age 65 and older and the disabled, by Feb. 1 will select the costliest prescription medications to negotiate on, with prices coming into effect in 2027.

The guidance is being closely watched by pharmaceutical manufacturers who make the 15 drugs likely to get picked for negotiations.

CMS said changes to the process, which came after feedback from patients and drugmakers, include meeting with companies earlier in the process and allowing more opportunities for counter offers.

The agency will now meet with drugmakers before making its initial offer, and will hold one of the three allotted negotiation meetings before the deadline for the first counter offer. If a company chooses to counter the government's offer, it will have two further meetings to negotiate.

"What we plan to do is have meetings with manufacturers before CMS actually sends an initial offer. But then once we have done an initial offer, we will have a first optional negotiation meeting with the manufacturer earlier than we did this past year," a CMS official told reporters on a press call.

"That will provide us with an opportunity to have a dialogue about the initial offer that CMS has sent, and potentially some early thinking from the manufacturer themselves around how they might do a counteroffer."

CMS announced prices for ten drugs in August in its first round of cuts following a year of talks. The prices are set to take effect in January 2026 and will save older Americans $1.5 billion in out of pocket costs, according to the agency.

Next year's talks will take place in a shorter timeframe, with a final decision on prices due by Nov. 30, 2025.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/US-Medicare-issues-updated-rules-for-second-round-of-drug-negotiations-47988594/

Mexican Soldiers Open Fire on Migrants, Killing Six

 Mexican soldiers killed six migrants when they opened fire on group of 33 migrants traveling in a pick-up truck that had tried to evade a military patrol, the defense ministry announced in a statement on Wednesday.

Another 10 migrants were injured in the incident on Tuesday evening, the ministry added, from a group of 33 migrants that included Egyptian, Nepalese, Cuban, Indian and Pakistani nationals.

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2024-10-02/mexican-soldiers-open-fire-on-migrants-killing-six

US port strike disrupts hamburger supplies, frozen seafood

 Dockworkers striking at U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast ports are preventing imports of beef that restaurants and retailers increasingly rely on to make hamburgers due to limited domestic supplies, traders and industry members said.

The labor strike blocks everything from shipments of automobiles to containers filled with Guatemalan bananas and Italian wine from loading or unloadingat dozens of ports from Maine to Texas. Along with beef, imports of seafood and U.S. exports of chicken are being disrupted.

Even short-term disruptions to shipments could snarl the broader U.S. food supply chain, according to experts and food importers. If the strike stretches out, the result will be either shortages of some food products, price inflation or both, they said.

More than 50 container ships were already anchored or loitering off dozens of East Coast and Gulf ports as of early Wednesday, compared to just three on Sunday before the strike, according to Reuters shipping data and Everstream Analytics.

"From a supply chain standpoint, this is a nightmare," said Jason Miller, interim chair of Michigan State University's department of supply chain management.

The beef sector could see ripple effects if the strike disrupts imports for more than a week, industry members said.

U.S. beef supplies tightened after a severe drought and high grain prices prompted ranchers to sell off their cattle, shrinking the nation's herd to the lowest level in decades.

The decline in cattle numbers led to soaring U.S. beef prices and a flurry of cheaper imports. Beef imports from Australia jumped 72% through July this year, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data. Imports from New Zealand and Brazil have also increased.

In anticipation of thestrike, suppliers to U.S. grocers and fast food restaurants ramped up imports of frozen lean beef that is mixed with domestic supplies to make hamburger meat, three industry members said.

Dan Sorbello, who imports beef into the Ports of Philadelphia and Houston, said he unloaded containers from vessels more quickly than normal ahead of the strike to make sure he could take possession of the meat and distribute it.

"We've got ourselves maybe a week's worth of lifeline," said Sorbello, principal for Sorbello Refrigerated Services.


SURF AND TURF

PanaPesca USA LLC, which imports and exports seafood, also stocked up on extra supplies of squid and shellfish to meet its customers' needs ahead of the strike, said chief commercial officer Eric Buckner.

Much of PanaPesca's product in freezer freight containers arrived, but some is still stuck on ships now anchored offshore, he said.

The strike could increase costs for fast food restaurants if it persists more than a week, said Bob Chudy, a consultant for companies that import beef.

"All of a sudden, fast food chains that have been relying on much more reasonably priced lean meat from overseas would be forced to turn to domestic alternatives," Chudy said.

McDonald's Corp MCD.N and Burger King, owned by Restaurant Brands International QSR.TO, did not respond to requests for comment.

Beef importers could face demurrage fees if the strike persists, costs that may be passed on to consumers, analysts said. Shipments of refrigerated fresh meat, which can be used in restaurant dishes like fajitas, risk spoiling, they said.

U.S. retail prices for ground beef in August reached a record high of $5.58 per pound, according to the latest available federal data.

For the U.S. chicken industry, which relies on exports, the strike is also ill-timed, said Matt Busardo, commodity information firm Expana's team lead for U.S. poultry.

Domestic demand is waning as consumers switch to eating cold-weather meals like pot roast and chili, instead of grilling chicken, he said. The sector relies on ports such as Savannah to export leg quarters and drumsticks to countries including Angola and Cuba.

https://www.xm.com/th/research/markets/allNews/reuters/us-port-strike-disrupts-hamburger-supplies-frozen-seafood-53937894

Biden Exempts Some Semiconductor Factories From Environmental Reviews

 President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed legislation that will exempt some U.S. semiconductor manufacturing facilities from federal environmental reviews that are receiving government subsidies.

Without the new law, projects from the $52.7 billion CHIPS Act of 2022 could have been forced to undergo additional federal environmental reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 to win federal permits.

Proponents say those projects had already complied with federal, state and local environmental regulations and permitting requirements and that without the change they could have potentially faced years of additional delays.

Environmental groups like the Sierra Club say the reviews are essential to "keep communities and workers safe from the hazardous contaminants used in the semiconductor industry."

The U.S. Commerce Department has allocated more than $35 billion for 26 projects including $6.4 billion in grants under the 2022 law to South Korea's Samsung, to expand chip production in Texas, $8.5 billion for Intel, $6.6 billion for Taiwan's TSMC to build out its American production and $6.1 billion for Micron Technology to fund U.S. factories.

The White House said it will "continue to uphold our commitment to ensuring that semiconductor projects are built and operated in a way that meets clean water, clean air, endangered species, and other federal requirements and minimizes risks and impacts to workers, public health, and the environment."

The Semiconductor Industry Association had warned that without the law the reviews could have slowed or stopped projects already under construction.

The bipartisan legislation was co-authored by Democratic Senator Mark Kelly and Republican Senator Ted Cruz.

"By preventing unnecessary delays in the construction of microchip manufacturing facilities, this bill will help maximize our efforts to bring this industry back to America, creating thousands of good-paying jobs and strengthening our supply chains," Kelly said.

Cruz said the effort to streamline permits is "a crucial step in onshoring jobs and making our country less dependent on China for semiconductors critical to national defense."

U.S. Representative Zoe Lofgren criticized the bill and said that California was home to sites that had been polluted from prior semiconductor or microelectronics manufacturing.

"We should be learning from this legacy and ensuring we don’t repeat it," she said, calling reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act "a vitally important tool in this regard."

https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2024-10-02/biden-signs-bill-exempting-some-semiconductor-factories-from-new-environmental-reviews

Toyota to delay US EV production to 2026 amid slowing sales, Nikkei reports

 Japanese automaker Toyota Motor would postpone the production of electric vehicles at its Kentucky plant in the US to the first half of 2026, citing design adjustments and slowing sales, the Nikkei business daily reported on Thursday.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/toyota-delay-us-ev-production-224510150.html