Falling productivity and patent expiries are placing increasing
pressure on pharmaceutical companies to reduce fix costs
including large manufacturing facilities. Sponsors are turning
to CMOs in search of time and cost savings and as a way to
flexibly manage outsourced manufacturing. Meanwhile the threat
of overcapacity combined with inevitable program cancellations
following mega-mergers resist the market. The CMO Market Outlook
analyzes the market dynamics, drivers and resistors and assesses
the structure of the market. China and India are discussed as
destinations for outsourced manufacturing including analyses of
regulatory changes and patent protection. Industry strategies
are detailed and critically examined. Key players in the global,
Chinese and Indian markets are also assessed. The industry
trends are examined and used to map out the future of the
industry including the impact on the landscape of players.
Key features of this report
Sizes the CMO market, including a breakdown of primary secondary
and biomanufacturing with forecasts to 2014.
Details market drivers and resistors against the background of
pharmaceutical market dynamics.
Separate forecasts to 2014 of the Chinese and Indian API and
finished dose markets.
Profiles the key global players in the CMO market as well as
those in China and India.
Examines key industry strategies in the context of the market
trends.
Reveals trends and their effects on the future of the industry
Key benefits from reading this report
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Save time and money in research with the report’s up to date
review and analysis of all the important trends in contract
manufacturing.
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Develop deeper insight into the size and growth of the global
CMO industry by utilizing the report’s market forecasts.
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Assess your organization’s outsourcing strategy and understand
how manufacturing costs can be reduced in the future by forming
alliances with CMOs and moving manufacturing to offshore
destinations.
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Identify the leading players in the CMO market, including
Indian and Chinese providers.
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Anticipate where the future CMOs will be placed and make your
outsourcing decisions as effective and economical as possible by
understanding the current and future contract manufacturing
industry dynamics.
Key market issues discussed
1. Cost cuts drive outsourcing: Financial pressures brought on
by declining productivity and the threat of patent expiries are
driving pharmaceutical companies to outsource an increasing
range of functions across the value chain.
2. Ensuring regulatory compliance: The sponsor or pharmaceutical
company is ultimately responsible for the manufacturing process,
whether externally or internally provided. In fact, the FDA
considers contract facilities as an extension of the pharma
company’s own facility. All facilities involved in the
manufacturing or testing of a drug product are required to
adhere to the portion of the cGMPs that apply to their
operations.
3. Biomanufacturing: An increasing number of top drugs will be
biologics, driving up manufacturing demand. Currently, most
biomanufacturing capability rests with innovator companies and a
few CMOs. Developing resources in this area is a key imperative
for CMOs in the future.
4. Strategic outsourcing: The sale of captive facilities means
that pharma companies increasingly outsource strategically
rather than based on short term need.
5. Globalization / Offshoring to India & China: To become the
offshoring destination of choice for drug manufacturing, China
and India must comply with Western manufacturing standards to
ensure safe and effective drugs. It will have to enforce
stronger measurements in controlling domestic suppliers of raw
material as well as collaborating more closely with foreign
regulatory bodies.
6. While the expanded Asian business potential and outsourcing
capabilities offer greater cost-saving and revenue-growth
opportunities, Western pharmaceutical companies must carefully
navigate the challenges that arise from operating in these
regions.Though products made in China and India offer Western
pharmaceutical companies attractive price incentives, most Asian
CMOs still fail to demonstrate the rigor of regulatory
compliance that Western companies demand and their customers
expect.
Key findings from this report
The contract manufacturing market was worth $22.2bn in 2009 and
will reach $33.7bn by 2014. Biopharmaceutical manufacturing is
the fastest growing industry segment.
Sale of captive facilities, cost pressures, the rising number of
products in development and the growth of the biopharmaceuticals
industry are all driving the CMO market.
Strategic outsourcing often entails establishing longer and
deeper relationships with a limited number of providers. Many
sponsors are selling their own facilities in order to reduce
fixed costs.
North America leads the world in biomanufacturing. Asia’s share
of global biomanufacturing facilities is expected to double from
10% in 2009 to around 20% by 2013.
Outsourced manufacturing is shifting from established markets in
the West to emerging markets in the East.
Key questions answered by this report
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What will the size and growth of the global CRO market be
through 2014?
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Which companies are current and future key players?
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What kind of business relationships will pharma companies and
CMOs establish in the future?
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What are the drivers and resistors of the CMO market?
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What will be size and growth of the Indian and Chinese API and
finished dose markets to 2014?
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How are Indian and Chinese CMOs placed for the future market?
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How are CMO service offerings evolving?