
By Sneha S K and Gnaneshwar Rajan
Jan 13 (Reuters) - Thermo Fisher Scientific's pharmaceutical services business has won a number of contracts to help its customers move production from Europe or Asia to the U.S., the medical equipment maker's CEO, Marc Casper, said on Tuesday.
"There's a very big focus on reshoring more production and activity to the U.S.," Casper said at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference, adding that the trend is going to be a tailwind in 2027 and 2028.
U.S. President Donald Trump has pushed pharma companies to onshore domestic manufacturing to the U.S.
Although enforcement of a proposed 100% tariff on imported medicines is delayed, the policy has already prompted fast-tracked projects, price cuts and direct-to-consumer sales.
Thermo last year acquired Sanofi's manufacturing site in Ridgefield, New Jersey, to produce critical medicines for the French drugmaker.
"Part of the reason we acquired the Sanofi site was really a capital expansion, to be able to help customers do that (reshore)," Casper said.
He also said that biotech funding is improving. "The pharmaceutical industry feels very confident about how they are working with the U.S. administration, and there's confidence in investing in their pipeline ... So actually we see an improving set of end markets."
Overall, Thermo Fisher's messaging was constructive and the company did a fine job expressing optimism without raising the bar for 2026, said Evercore ISI analyst Vijay Kumar.
(Reporting by Gnaneshwar Rajan and Sneha S K in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
New dietary guidelines recommend more dairy, meat and fats: What to know07.01.2026 - 2
Transcript: Scott Gottlieb on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Dec. 7, 202507.12.2025 - 3
Holiday weather forecast: Where travelers can expect a wintry mix, flooding and record warmth across the U.S.22.12.2025 - 4
I asked ChatGPT who would win a Golden Globes. Here's what it got right — and totally wrong.12.01.2026 - 5
These 2 moon rovers used cameras and lasers to hunt for simulated water ice — and one looks like WALL-E24.11.2025
similar_articles

Science is best communicated through identity and culture – how researchers are ensuring STEM serves their communities

How mountain terraces have helped Indigenous peoples live with climate uncertainty

How Mars 'punches above its weight' to influence Earth's climate

Mummified cheetahs found in Saudi caves shed light on lost populations

Prehistoric wolf’s gut frozen in time reveals an ice age giant

Fossil analysis changes what paleontologists know about how long T. rex took to grow full size

Limited Rain Chances in Brazil Boost Coffee Prices

China’s new condom tax will prove no effective barrier to country’s declining fertility rate

Bahgovnews

