Business | More than a headache

Can Bayer recover from its chronic pain?

The Aspirin-maker is suffering from complications of its acquisition of Monsanto

The logo of German chemical and pharmaceutical giant Bayer at the group's plant in Leverkusen, western Germany.
Photograph: Getty Images
|BERLIN

ON MARCH 6TH 1899 acetylsalicylic acid, better known as Aspirin, was registered at the imperial patent office in Berlin. The first-ever synthetic drug went on to become one of the world’s most successful medicines. On Aspirin’s 125th birthday its maker, Bayer, is in no mood for schnapps. In the run-up to the presentation of its new strategy and annual results on March 5th, analysts and investors speculated about the radical surgery that Bill Anderson, the newish chief executive, might announce in order to quell chronic crises facing Bayer. Would he, perhaps, split its drug and crop-science businesses? Or spin off the consumer-health unit, which makes Aspirin and other non-prescription staples? “Not now,” Mr Anderson said. But, he clarified, this does not mean “never”.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “More than a headache”

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