Use these links to rapidly review the document
TABLE OF CONTENTS
NOVARTIS GROUP INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 26, 2010

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington D.C. 20549



FORM 20-F

o   REGISTRATION STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OR 12(g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
OR
ý   ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2009
OR
o   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
OR
o   SHELL COMPANY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Commission file number 1-15024

NOVARTIS AG
(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

NOVARTIS Inc.
(Translation of Registrant's name into English)

Switzerland
(Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

Lichtstrasse 35
4056 Basel, Switzerland

(Address of principal executive offices)

Thomas Werlen
Group General Counsel
Novartis AG
CH-4056 Basel
Switzerland
011-41-61-324-2745
thomas.werlen@novartis.com
(Name, Telephone, E-mail and/or Facsimile number and Address of Company Contact Person)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

 
   
Title of class
American Depositary Shares
each representing 1 share,
nominal value CHF 0.50 per share,
and shares
  Name of each exchange on which registered
New York Stock Exchange, Inc.

Securities registered or to be registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:

None

Securities for which there is a reporting obligation pursuant to Section 15(d) of the Act:

None

Indicate the number of outstanding shares of each of the issuer's classes of capital or common stock as of the close of the period covered by the annual report:

2,274,353,351 shares

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.

Yes ý No o

If this report is an annual or transition report, indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes o No ý

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes ý No o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of "accelerated filer and large accelerated filer" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act (Check one):

Large accelerated filer ý                        Accelerated filer o                        Non-accelerated filer o

Indicate by check mark which basis of accounting the registrant has used to prepare the financial statements included in this filing:

o  U.S. GAAP   ý  International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board   o  Other

If "Other" has been checked in response to the previous question indicate by check mark which financial statement item the registrant has elected to follow.

Item 17 o Item 18 o

If this is an annual report, indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

Yes o No ý


Table of Contents


TABLE OF CONTENTS

  INTRODUCTION AND USE OF CERTAIN TERMS     1  

 

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

 

1

 

 

PART I

 

 

3

 

 

 

 

Item

 

1.

 

Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisers

 

 

3

 

 

 

 

Item

 

2.

 

Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable

 

 

3

 

 

 

 

Item

 

3.

 

Key Information

 

 

3

 
          3.A   Selected Financial Data     3  
          3.B   Capitalization and Indebtedness     6  
          3.C   Reasons for the offer and use of proceeds     6  
          3.D   Risk Factors     6  

 

 

 

Item

 

4.

 

Information on the Company

 

 

18

 
          4.A   History and Development of Novartis     18  
          4.B   Business Overview     21  
              Pharmaceuticals     23  
              Vaccines and Diagnostics     57  
              Sandoz     64  
              Consumer Health     71  
          4.C   Organizational Structure     76  
          4.D   Property, Plants and Equipment     76  

 

 

 

Item

 

4A.

 

Unresolved Staff Comments

 

 

83

 

 

 

 

Item

 

5.

 

Operating and Financial Review and Prospects

 

 

83

 
          5.A   Operating Results     83  
          5.B   Liquidity and Capital Resources     149  
          5.C   Research & Development, Patents and Licenses     153  
          5.D   Trend Information     153  
          5.E   Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements     154  
          5.F   Aggregate Contractual Obligations     154  

 

 

 

Item

 

6.

 

Directors, Senior Management and Employees

 

 

156

 
          6.A   Directors and Senior Management     156  
          6.B   Compensation     164  
          6.C   Board Practices     185  
          6.D   Employees     201  
          6.E   Share Ownership     202  

 

 

 

Item

 

7.

 

Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions

 

 

203

 
          7.A   Major Shareholders     203  
          7.B   Related Party Transactions     204  
          7.C   Interests of Experts and Counsel     204  

 

 

 

Item

 

8.

 

Financial Information

 

 

205

 
          8.A   Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information     205  
          8.B   Significant Changes     205  

 

 

 

Item

 

9.

 

The Offer and Listing

 

 

205

 
          9.A   Listing Details     205  
          9.B   Plan of Distribution     206  
          9.C   Market     207  
          9.D   Selling Shareholders     207  
          9.E   Dilution     207  
          9.F   Expenses of the Issue     207  

Table of Contents


 

 

 

Item

 

10.

 

Additional Information

 

 

207

 
          10.A   Share capital     207  
          10.B   Memorandum and Articles of Association     207  
          10.C   Material contracts     212  
          10.D   Exchange controls     212  
          10.E   Taxation     212  
          10.F   Dividends and paying agents     217  
          10.G   Statement by experts     217  
          10.H   Documents on display     217  
          10.I   Subsidiary Information     218  

 

 

 

Item

 

11.

 

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Non-Product-Related Market Risk

 

 

219

 

 

 

 

Item

 

12.

 

Description of Securities other than Equity Securities

 

 

224

 
          12.A   Debt Securities     224  
          12.B   Warrants and Rights     224  
          12.C   Other Securities     224  
          12.D   American Depositary Shares     225  

 

PART II

 

 

227

 

 

 

 

Item

 

13.

 

Defaults, Dividend Arrearages and Delinquencies

 

 

227

 

 

 

 

Item

 

14.

 

Material Modifications to the Rights of Security Holders and Use of Proceeds

 

 

227

 

 

 

 

Item

 

15.

 

Controls and Procedures

 

 

228

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16A.

 

Audit Committee Financial Expert

 

 

228

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16B.

 

Code of Ethics

 

 

228

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16C.

 

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

 

229

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16D.

 

Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit Committees

 

 

230

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16E.

 

Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated Purchasers

 

 

231

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16F

 

Change in Registrant's Certifying Accountant

 

 

231

 

 

 

 

Item

 

16G.

 

Corporate Governance

 

 

231

 

 

PART III

 

 

232

 

 

 

 

Item

 

17.

 

Financial Statements

 

 

232

 

 

 

 

Item

 

18.

 

Financial Statements

 

 

232

 

 

 

 

Item

 

19.

 

Exhibits

 

 

233

 

Table of Contents


INTRODUCTION

        Novartis AG and its consolidated affiliates (Novartis or the Group) publish consolidated financial statements expressed in US dollars. Our consolidated financial statements found in Item 18 of this annual report on Form 20-F (Form 20-F) are those for the year ended December 31, 2009 and are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).




USE OF CERTAIN TERMS

        In this Form 20-F, references to "US dollars," "$" or "USD" are to the lawful currency of the United States of America, and references to "CHF" are to Swiss francs; references to the "United States" or to "US" are to the United States of America, references to the European Union (EU) are to the European Union and its 27 member states and references to "Americas" are to North, Central (including the Caribbean) and South America, unless the context otherwise requires; references to "ADS" or "ADSs" are to Novartis American Depositary Shares; references to "associates" are to employees of our affiliates; references to the "FDA" are to the US Food and Drug Administration, and references to "EMEA" are to the European Medicines Agency, an agency of the EU. All product names appearing in italics are trademarks owned by or licensed to Group companies. Product names identified by a "®" or a "™" are trademarks that are not owned by or licensed to Group companies. You will find the words "we," "our," "us" and similar words or phrases in this Form 20-F. We use those words to comply with the requirement of the US Securities and Exchange Commission to use "plain English" in public documents like this Form 20-F. For the sake of clarification, each Group company is legally separate from all other Group companies and manages its business independently through its respective board of directors or other top local management body. No Group company operates the business of another Group company nor is any Group company the agent of any other Group company. Each executive identified in this Form 20-F reports directly to other executives of the Group company which employs the executive, or to that Group company's board of directors.




FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

        This Form 20-F contains certain "forward looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which can be identified by terminology such as "planned," "expected," "will," "potential," "pipeline," "outlook," or similar expressions, or by express or implied discussions regarding potential new products, potential new indications for existing products, or regarding potential future revenues from any such products, or potential future sales or earnings of the Novartis Group or any of its divisions or business units; or regarding the potential acquisition and merger with Alcon; or by discussions of strategy, plans, expectations or intentions. You should not place undue reliance on these statements. Such forward-looking statements reflect the current views of the Group regarding future events, and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements. There can be no guarantee that any new products will be approved for sale in any market, or that any new indications will be approved for existing products in any market, or that such products will achieve any particular revenue levels. Nor can there be any guarantee that the Novartis Group, or any of its divisions or business units, will achieve any particular financial results. Neither can there be any guarantee that the proposed acquisition and merger with Alcon will be completed in the expected form or within the expected time frame or at all. Nor can there be any guarantee that Novartis will be able to realize any of the potential synergies, strategic benefits or opportunities as a result of the proposed acquisition. In particular, management's expectations could be affected by, among other things, unexpected clinical trial results,

1


Table of Contents


including additional analysis of existing clinical data or unexpected new clinical data; unexpected regulatory actions or delays or government regulation generally; the Group's ability to obtain or maintain patent or other proprietary intellectual property protection; uncertainties regarding actual or potential legal proceedings, including, among others, product liability litigation, litigation regarding sales and marketing practices, government investigations and intellectual property disputes; competition in general; government, industry, and general public pricing and other political pressures; uncertainties regarding the after-effects of the recent global financial and economic crisis; uncertainties regarding future global exchange rates and uncertainties regarding future demand for our products; uncertainties involved in the development of new pharmaceutical products; the impact that the foregoing factors could have on the values attributed to the Group's assets and liabilities as recorded in the Group's consolidated balance sheet. Some of these factors are discussed in more detail herein, including under "Item 3. Key Information—3.D. Risk factors," "Item 4. Information on the Company," and "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects." Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those described in this Form 20-F as anticipated, believed, estimated or expected. We provide the information in this 20-F as of the date of its filing. We do not intend, and do not assume any obligation, to update any information or forward looking statements set out in this Form 20-F as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

2


Table of Contents


PART I

Item 1.    Identity of Directors, Senior Management and Advisers

        Not applicable.

Item 2.    Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable

        Not applicable.

Item 3.    Key Information


3.A  Selected Financial Data

        The selected financial information set out below has been extracted from our consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with IFRS as issued by the IASB. Our consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2009, 2008 and 2007 are included in "Item 18. Financial Statements" in this Form 20-F.

        The results of our Medical Nutrition and Gerber Business Units are shown as discontinued operations for all periods presented, following their divestment in 2007. See "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—5.A Operating Results—Factors Affecting Comparability of Year-on-Year Results of Operations" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 2" for more detailed discussion.

        All financial data should be read in conjunction with "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects." All financial data presented in this Form 20-F are qualified in their entirety by reference to the consolidated financial statements and their notes.

3


Table of Contents

 
  Year Ended December 31,  
 
  2009   2008   2007   2006   2005  
 
  ($ millions, except per share information)
 

INCOME STATEMENT DATA

                               

Net sales from continuing operations

    44,267     41,459     38,072     34,393     29,446  
                       

Operating income from continuing operations

    9,982     8,964     6,781     7,642     6,507  

Income from associated companies

    293     441     412     264     193  

Financial income

    198     384     531     354     461  

Interest expense

    (551 )   (290 )   (237 )   (266 )   (294 )
                       

Income before taxes from continuing operations

    9,922     9,499     7,487     7,994     6,867  

Taxes

    1,468     (1,336 )   (947 )   (1,169 )   (986 )
                       

Net income from continuing operations

    8,454     8,163     6,540     6,825     5,881  

Net income from discontinued operations

          70     5,428     377     260  
                       

Group net income

    8,454     8,233     11,968     7,202     6,141  
                       

Attributable to:

                               
 

Shareholders of Novartis AG

    8,400     8,195     11,946     7,175     6,130  
 

Non-controlling interests

    54     38     22     27     11  

Operating income from discontinued operations (including divestment gains)

         
70
   
6,152
   
532
   
398
 

Basic earnings per share ($):

                               

—Continuing operations

    3.70     3.59     2.81     2.90     2.52  

—Discontinued operations

          0.03     2.34     0.16     0.11  

—Total

    3.70     3.62     5.15     3.06     2.63  

Diluted earnings per share ($):

                               

—Continuing operations

    3.69     3.56     2.80     2.88     2.51  

—Discontinued operations

          0.03     2.33     0.16     0.11  

—Total

    3.69     3.59     5.13     3.04     2.62  

Cash dividends(1)

   
3,941
   
3,345
   
2,598
   
2,049
   
2,107
 

Cash dividends per share in CHF(2)

    2.10     2.00     1.60     1.35     1.15  

Operating income from continuing operations earnings per share ($):

                               

—Basic

    4.40     3.96     2.93     3.26     2.79  

—Diluted

    4.38     3.92     2.91     3.24     2.78  

(1)
Cash dividends represent cash payments in the applicable year that generally relate to earnings of the previous year.

(2)
Cash dividends per share represent dividends proposed that relate to earnings of the current year. Dividends for 2009 will be proposed to the Annual General Meeting on February 26, 2010 for approval.

4


Table of Contents

 
  Year Ended December 31,  
 
  2009   2008   2007   2006   2005  
 
  ($ millions)
 

BALANCE SHEET DATA

                               

Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities & derivative financial instruments

    17,449     6,117     13,201     7,955     10,933  

Inventories

    5,830     5,792     5,455     4,498     3,725  

Other current assets

    10,412     8,972     8,774     8,215     6,785  

Non-current assets

    61,814     57,418     48,022     46,604     36,289  

Assets held for sale related to discontinued operations

                      736        
                       

Total assets

    95,505     78,299     75,452     68,008     57,732  
                       

Trade accounts payable

    4,012     3,395     3,018     2,487     1,961  

Other current liabilities

    15,458     13,109     13,623     13,540     13,367  

Non-current liabilities

    18,573     11,358     9,415     10,480     9,240  

Liabilities related to discontinued operations

                      207        
                       

Total liabilities

    38,043     27,862     26,056     26,714     24,568  
                       

Issued share capital and reserves attributable to shareholders of Novartis AG

    57,387     50,288     49,223     41,111     32,990  

Non-controlling interests

    75     149     173     183     174  
                       

Total equity

    57,462     50,437     49,396     41,294     33,164  
                       

Total liabilities and equity

    95,505     78,299     75,452     68,008     57,732  
                       

Net assets

    57,462     50,437     49,396     41,294     33,164  

Outstanding share capital

    825     820     815     850     848  

Total outstanding shares (millions)

    2,274     2,265     2,264     2,348     2,336  


Cash Dividends per Share

        Cash dividends are translated into US dollars at the Reuters Market System Rate on the payment date. Because we pay dividends in Swiss francs, exchange rate fluctuations will affect the US dollar amounts received by holders of ADSs.

Year Earned
  Month and
Year Paid
  Total Dividend
per share
  Total Dividend
per share in $
 
 
   
  (CHF)
  ($)
 

2005

  February 2006     1.15     0.89  

2006

  March 2007     1.35     1.09  

2007

  February 2008     1.60     1.53  

2008

  February 2009     2.00     1.72  

2009(1)

  February 2010     2.10     2.04 (2)

(1)
Dividend to be proposed at the Annual General Meeting on February 26, 2010 and to be distributed March 5, 2010.

(2)
Translated into US dollars at the 2009 Reuters Market System period end rate of $0.97 to the Swiss franc. This translation is an example only, and should not be construed as a representation that the Swiss franc amount represents, or has been or could be converted into US dollars at that or any other rate.

5


Table of Contents


Exchange Rates

        The following table shows, for the years and dates indicated, certain information concerning the rate of exchange of US dollar per Swiss franc based on exchange rate information found on Reuters Market System. The exchange rate in effect on January 19, 2010, as found on Reuters Market System, was CHF 1.00 = $0.97.

Year ended December 31,
($ per CHF)
  Period End   Average(1)   Low   High  

2005

    0.76     0.80     0.75     0.88  

2006

    0.82     0.80     0.76     0.84  

2007

    0.88     0.83     0.80     0.91  

2008

    0.94     0.93     0.82     1.02  

2009

    0.97     0.92     0.84     1.00  

                         

Month end,
                         

August 2009

                0.92     0.95  

September 2009

                0.94     0.98  

October 2009

                0.96     0.99  

November 2009

                0.97     1.00  

December 2009

                0.95     1.00  

January 2010(2)

                0.96     0.98  

(1)
Represents the average of the exchange rates on the last day of each full month during the year.

(2)
Through January 19, 2010.


3.B  Capitalization and Indebtedness

        Not applicable.


3.C  Reasons for the offer and use of proceeds

        Not applicable.


3.D  Risk Factors

        Our businesses face significant risks and uncertainties. You should carefully consider all of the information set forth in this annual report on Form 20-F and in other documents we file with or furnish to the SEC, including the following risk factors, before deciding to invest in any Novartis securities. Our business as well as our financial condition or results of operations could be materially adversely affected by any of these risks, as well as other risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or not currently deemed to be material.


Risks Facing Our Business

Our Pharmaceuticals Division faces and will continue to face important patent expirations and aggressive generic competition.

        Our Pharmaceuticals Division's products are generally protected by patent rights, which are intended to provide us with exclusive rights to market the patented products. However, those patent rights are of

6


Table of Contents


varying strengths and durations. Loss of market exclusivity for one or more important products—which we will face in the near future—will have a material adverse effect on our results of operations.

        The introduction of a generic version of a branded medicine typically results in a significant and rapid reduction in net sales for the branded product because generic manufacturers typically offer their unbranded versions at sharply lower prices. Such competition can result from the regular expiration of the term of the patent. Such competition can also result from the entry of generic versions of another medicine in the same therapeutic class as one of our drugs, or in another competing therapeutic class. In addition, generic manufacturers are taking an increasingly aggressive approach to challenging patents, conducting so-called "launches at risk" of products that are still under legal challenge for patent infringement, before final resolution of legal proceedings.

        We also rely in all aspects of our businesses on unpatented proprietary technology, know-how, trade secrets and other confidential information, which we seek to protect through various measures including confidentiality agreements with licensees, employees, third-party collaborators, or consultants who may have access to such information. If these agreements are breached, our contractual remedies may not be adequate to cover any losses.

        Some of our best-selling products are expected to face significant competition in the coming years due to the end of market exclusivity resulting from the expiry of patent protection.

        Some of our products are also the subject of ongoing patent litigation. In particular, zoledronic acid, the active ingredient in Zometa (cancer), as well as in Reclast/Aclasta (osteoporosis), is currently the subject of US patent litigation, with the possibility of an "at risk launch" of a generic version of Zometa by one or more generic competitors in December 2010, when the 30-month stay period expires, absent any court decision preventing such a launch before then.

        For more information on the patent status of our Pharmaceuticals Division's products see "Item 4. Information on the Company—Item 4.B Business Overview—Pharmaceuticals—Intellectual Property" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 20".

        Clearly, with respect to products for which the patent terms are expiring, the loss of exclusivity of these products will have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. In addition, should we unexpectedly lose exclusivity on additional products due to patent litigation or other reasons, this will have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations, both due to the loss of revenue, and the difficulties in planning for such losses.

7


Table of Contents

Our business is increasingly affected by pressures on drug pricing.

        The growth of overall healthcare costs as a percentage of gross domestic product in many countries means that governments and payors are under intense pressure to control spending even more tightly. These pressures are particularly strong given the lingering effects of the recent global economic and financial crisis. As a result, our businesses and the healthcare industry in general are operating in an ever more challenging environment with very significant pricing pressures. These ongoing pressures include government-imposed industry-wide price reductions, mandatory pricing systems, an increase in imports of drugs from lower-cost countries to higher-cost countries, shifting of the payment burden to patients through higher co-payments, limiting physicians' ability to choose among competing medicines, mandatory substitution of generic drugs and growing pressure on physicians to reduce the prescribing of patented prescription medicines. We expect these efforts to continue as healthcare payors around the globe—in particular government-controlled health authorities, insurance companies and managed care organizations—step up initiatives to reduce the overall cost of healthcare, restrict access to higher-priced new medicines, increase the use of generics and impose overall price cuts. Such initiatives include the current efforts in the US to enact healthcare reform.

        These initiatives not only affect the results of our Pharmaceuticals Division, but also have an increasing impact on the prices we can charge for the generic drugs marketed by our Sandoz Division. This is particularly true in Europe and especially Germany, our second-largest market for generic products, where various measures have been introduced to require generic manufacturers to lower their prices. In addition, in the US, a combination of aggressive efforts by distributors and retailers to increase their profit margins on generic products that are considered commodities, intense and increasing competition between generic pharmaceutical manufacturers, and changes and potential future changes to government regulations, including state and federal regulations and regulations impacting Medicare and Medicaid, are increasing the downward pressure on our prices there. We expect these and other challenges to continue to put pressure on our revenues, and therefore they could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

        For more information on pricing controls and on our challenging business environment see "Item 4. Information on the Company—Item 4.B Business Overview—Pharmaceuticals—Price Controls."

Our research and development efforts may not succeed in bringing high-potential products to market.

        Our ability to continue to grow our business and to replace sales lost due to the end of market exclusivity depends upon the success of our research and development activities in identifying and developing high-potential breakthrough products that address unmet needs, are accepted by patients and physicians, and are reimbursed by payors. To accomplish this, we commit substantial effort, funds and other resources to research and development, both through our own dedicated resources and through various collaborations with third parties. Developing new pharmaceutical products and bringing them to market, however, is a costly, lengthy and uncertain process. In spite of our significant investments, there can be no guarantee that our research and development activities will produce a sufficient number of commercially viable new products.

        The research and development process for a new pharmaceutical product can take up to 15 years, or even longer, from discovery to commercial product launch—and with a limited available patent life the longer it takes to develop a product, the less time there will be for us to recoup our development costs. New products need not only undergo intensive preclinical and clinical testing, but also must pass a highly complex, lengthy and expensive approval process. During each stage, there is a substantial risk that we will encounter serious obstacles which will further delay us and add substantial expense, or that we will not achieve our goals and, accordingly, may be forced to abandon a product in which we have invested substantial amounts of time and money. Reasons for delays may include: failure of the product candidate in preclinical studies; difficulty enrolling patients in clinical trials or delays or clinical trial holds at clinical trial sites; delays in completing formulation and other testing and work necessary to support an

8


Table of Contents


application for regulatory approval; adverse reactions to the product candidate or indications of other safety concerns; insufficient clinical trial data to support the safety or efficacy of the product candidate; our inability to manufacture sufficient quantities of the product candidate for development or commercialization activities in a timely and cost-efficient manner; and failure to obtain, or delays in obtaining, the required regulatory approvals for the product candidate or the facilities in which it is manufactured. Similar efforts are required to develop new products in our other divisions, as well, and similar risks apply. For a description of the approval processes which must be followed to market our products, see the sections headed "Regulation" included in the descriptions of our four operating divisions under "Item 4. Information on the Company—Item 4.B Business Overview."

        The pharmaceuticals industry has seen a dearth of regulatory approvals for new drugs in recent years, coupled with a significant increase in the cost per drug approved. For example, the FDA approved only 26 entirely new drugs (new molecular entities) in 2009. This follows 24 new approvals in 2008 and only 18 in 2007, one of the lowest single-year totals since 1983, when there were 14. These approval levels compare with the average annual approval rate of more than 30 new medicines per year in the period from 1996 to 2004. In addition, many of the new drugs approved in recent years have not been as financially successful as those approved in prior years. This relatively low level of research productivity comes at a time when the worldwide pharmaceuticals industry is estimated to be spending nearly $50 billion each year on research and development activities, according to the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. As a result, industry research and development spending per new molecular entity approved has climbed more than 200% to $3.7 billion for 2006–2008 compared to only $1.2 billion for 1998–2000.

        If we are unable to maintain a flow of successful new products and new indications for existing products sufficient to cover our substantial research and development costs and to replace sales lost as older products are lost to generic competition, or displaced by competing products or therapies—including the significant number of important products likely to face generic competition in the near future—this could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

        In addition, we invest a significant amount of effort and financial resources into research and development collaborations with third parties—organizations that we do not control. Many of these may be small companies that do not have the same resources and development expertise as Novartis. If these third parties fail to meet our expectations, we may lose our investment in the collaborations or fail to receive the expected benefits, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

Increasing regulatory scrutiny of drug safety and efficacy may adversely affect us.

        Following several widely publicized issues in recent years, health regulators are increasingly focusing on product safety. Recently, the Obama Administration has publicly emphasized the importance of enforcing US drug safety regulations. In addition, authorities have paid increased attention to the risk/benefit profile of pharmaceutical products. These developments have led to requests for more clinical trial data, for the inclusion of a significantly higher number of patients in clinical trials, and for more detailed analysis of the trials. As a result, the already lengthy and expensive process of obtaining regulatory approvals for pharmaceutical products has become even more challenging.

        In addition, the post-approval regulatory burden has been increasing. Approved drugs have increasingly been subject to requirements such as risk evaluation and mitigation strategies, comparative effectiveness studies and requirements to conduct post-approval Phase IV clinical trials to gather far more detailed safety and other data on products. These requirements have the effect of making the maintenance of regulatory approvals increasingly expensive, and further heightening the risk of recalls or loss of market share.

9


Table of Contents

        These regulatory requirements, and any additional adverse regulatory developments in the approval process for new products or in the continued marketing of significant existing products, or any increases in regulation or major changes in the healthcare landscape, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Legal proceedings may have a significant negative effect on our results of operations.

        We are obligated to comply with the laws of the approximately 140 countries in which we operate, covering an extremely wide range of activities. To that end, we have a strong global compliance with law program in place. Nonetheless, in recent years, there has been a trend of increasing litigation and government investigations against companies operating in the industries of which we are a part, especially in the US. A number of our subsidiaries are, and will likely continue to be, subject to various legal proceedings that arise from time to time, including proceedings regarding product liability, commercial disputes, employment and wrongful discharge, antitrust, securities, sales and marketing practices, health and safety, environmental, tax, privacy, and intellectual property matters. As a result, we may become subject to substantial liabilities that may not be covered by insurance. Litigation is inherently unpredictable, and large verdicts sometimes occur. As a consequence, we may in the future incur judgments or enter into settlements of claims that could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or cash flows.

        In particular, governments and regulatory authorities have been stepping up their compliance and law enforcement activities in recent years in key areas, including corruption, marketing practices, antitrust and trade restrictions. Responding to such investigations is costly, and a significant diversion of management's attention from our business. In addition, such investigations may affect our reputation and create a risk of potential exclusion from US federal government reimbursement programs. These factors have contributed to decisions by us and other companies in our industry to enter into settlement agreements with governmental, and particularly federal, authorities. Those settlements have involved and may continue to involve very large cash payments, including the potential repayment of amounts allegedly obtained improperly and penalties up to treble damages. In addition, settlements of healthcare fraud cases often require companies to enter into a corporate integrity agreement, which is intended to regulate company behavior for a period of years. Also, matters underlying governmental investigations and settlements may be the subject of separate private litigation.

        Our businesses have been subject, from time to time, to such governmental investigations and information requests by regulatory authorities. For example, we have been cooperating with parallel civil and criminal investigations by the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (EDPA) into allegations of potential off-label marketing and promotion of our epilepsy drug, Trileptal, as well as certain payments made to healthcare providers in connection with this medicine. one of our affiliates recently entered into a plea agreement with the EDPA, which is contingent on court approval, to resolve criminal allegations. Pursuant to the plea agreement, the affiliate will plead guilty to a misdemeanor violation of the US Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and pay $185 million. The affiliate is currently negotiating with the EDPA to resolve civil claims relating to Trileptal. In the fourth quarter of 2009, we increased provisions relating to the EDPA's Trileptal investigation by $318 million. Total provisions relating to the EDPA's civil and criminal Trileptal investigations were $397 million. Our affiliate is also cooperating with an investigation by the EDPA regarding potential off-label marketing and promotion as well as payments made to healthcare providers in connection with five other products: Diovan, Exforge, Sandostatin, Tekturna and Zelnorm. We are unable to assess with reasonable certainty the outcome of the investigation related to these five products or the amounts, which could be material, that we might be required to pay to resolve this investigation.

        At the same time, our Sandoz Division may, from time to time, seek approval to market a generic version of a product before the expiration of patents claimed by one of our competitors for the branded product. We do this in cases where we believe that the relevant patents are invalid, unenforceable, or

10


Table of Contents


would not be infringed by our generic product. As a result, affiliates of our Sandoz Division frequently face patent litigation, and in certain circumstances, we may elect to market a generic product even though patent infringement actions are still pending. Should we elect to proceed in this manner and conduct a "launch at risk," we could face substantial damages if the final court decision is adverse to us.

        Separately, the US affiliates of our Pharmaceuticals and Sandoz Divisions are the subjects of lawsuits brought by private plaintiffs and a number of state and local governments alleging that they have fraudulently overstated the Average Wholesale Price and "best price," which are, or have been, used by the US federal and state governments in the calculation of, respectively, US Medicare reimbursements and Medicaid rebates. While a Novartis affiliate was successful on appeal in one of these actions, juries have awarded plaintiffs substantial damages in three trials against Novartis affiliates to date. More trials are expected in the future.

        Adverse judgments or settlements in any of these cases could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

        In addition, in many countries, particularly less-developed markets, we rely heavily on third-party distributors and other agents for the marketing and distribution of our products. Many of these third parties are small and do not have internal compliance resources comparable to those within our organization. Some of these countries are plagued by corruption. If our efforts to screen our third-party agents and detect cases of potential misconduct fail, we could be held responsible for the noncompliance of these third parties with applicable laws and regulations, which may have a negative effect on our reputation and our business.

        For more detail regarding specific legal matters currently pending against us and provisions for such matters, see "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 20."

An increasing amount of intangible assets and goodwill on our books may lead to significant impairment charges in the future.

        The amount of goodwill and other intangible assets on our consolidated balance sheet has increased significantly in recent years, primarily due to acquisitions. Although no significant additional impairments are currently anticipated, impairment testing could lead to material impairment charges in the future.

        We regularly review our long-lived intangible and tangible assets, including identifiable intangible assets, investments in associated companies and goodwill, for impairment. Goodwill, acquired research and development, and acquired development projects not yet ready for use are subject to impairment review at least annually. Other long-lived assets are reviewed for impairment when there is an indication that an impairment may have occurred. Impairment testing under IFRS may lead to impairment charges in the future. Any significant impairment charges could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations. For a detailed discussion of how we determine whether an impairment has occurred, what factors could result in an impairment and the increasing impact of impairment charges on our results of operations, see "Item 5.A Operating Results—Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates—Impairment of Long-Lived Intangible and Tangible Assets" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 11."

Risks related to our expected acquisition of a majority interest in Alcon and subsequent merger with Alcon.

        On January 4, 2010, we announced that we had exercised our option obtained in 2008 to acquire Nestlé's remaining 52% majority stake in Alcon (such that, with the 25% we previously purchased from Nestlé, we would become a 77% shareholder of Alcon). We also separately proposed to enter into an all-share direct merger with Alcon to acquire the remaining 23% publicly-held stake.

        Our acquisition of the 52% majority stake from Nestlé is conditioned upon the receipt of certain governmental clearances or approvals, including the expiration or termination of the applicable waiting period under the US Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, the issuance by the European Commission (EC) of a

11


Table of Contents


decision under the EC Merger Regulation declaring the merger compatible with the common market, and the clearance or approval of the merger by the antitrust regulators in a number of other countries. While Nestlé and Novartis have agreed to use their reasonable best efforts to obtain these clearances and approvals, there can be no assurance that they will be obtained, or that the governmental authorities will not seek to impose material conditions on the acquisition or require the divestment of material assets.

        In addition, our proposed merger with Alcon is conditioned both on the completion of the 52% stake acquisition from Nestlé and on the approval by the Boards of Directors of Novartis and Alcon. The merger would also require two-thirds approval by the shareholders of Novartis and Alcon voting at their respective meetings. If the merger is delayed, the timing and/or realization of the anticipated benefits and cost savings from fully integrating the businesses of Novartis and Alcon will be adversely affected. Once the acquisition and merger with Alcon is approved and completed, its success will depend, in part, on the combined company's ability to realize these benefits and cost savings and to retain and motivate its executives and key employees.

Our indebtedness could adversely affect our operations.

        As of December 31, 2009 we had $8.7 billion of non-current financial debt and $5.3 billion of current financial debt. In addition, we expect to increase our indebtedness by $16 billion to finance our acquisition of Nestlé's 52% stake in Alcon. Our current and future debt requires us to dedicate a portion of our cash flow to service interest and principal payments and may limit our ability to engage in other transactions and otherwise place us at a competitive disadvantage to our competitors that have less debt. We may have difficulty refinancing our existing debt or incurring new debt on terms that we would consider to be commercially reasonable, if at all.

We may not be able to realize the expected benefits of our significant investments in emerging growth markets.

        At a time of slowing growth in sales of pharmaceuticals in industrialized countries, many emerging markets have experienced comparatively strong economies, leading to proportionally higher growth and an increasing contribution to the industry's global performance. In 2009, we generated approximately 65% (2008: 64%) of our net sales from continuing operations in the world's seven largest developed markets, while the six leading emerging markets—Brazil, China, India, Russia, South Korea and Turkey—contributed 9% (2008: 9%) of net sales. However, combined net sales in these six priority emerging markets grew 17% in local currency in 2009, compared to 10% sales growth in local currency in the seven largest developed markets during the same period. As a result of this trend, we have been taking steps to increase our presence in these priority emerging markets and in other emerging markets. For example, a cross-divisional operating structure is being expanded following its initial implementation in 2007 to accelerate growth in smaller emerging markets and better position the comprehensive presence of all Novartis products. These types of markets include Northern and Sub-Saharan Africa, Central Asia and some countries in Southeast Asia.

        There is no guarantee that our efforts to expand our sales in these countries will succeed, or that these countries will continue to experience growth rates in excess of the world's largest markets. Some emerging countries may be especially vulnerable to the after-effects of the recent global financial crisis, or may have very limited resources to spend on healthcare. See "—The after-effects of the recent economic and financial crisis may have a material adverse effect on our results" below. Many of these countries have a relatively limited number of persons with the skills and training suitable for employment at an enterprise such as ours. See also "—An inability to attract and retain qualified personnel could adversely affect our business" below. In other emerging countries, we may be required to rely on third-party agents, which may put us at risk of liability. See also "—Legal proceedings may have a significant negative effect on our results of operations" above. A failure to continue to expand our business in emerging growth markets could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

12


Table of Contents

The after-effects of the recent global economic and financial crisis may have a material adverse effect on our results.

        Many of the world's largest economies and financial institutions continue to be impacted by the recent global economic and financial crisis, with some continuing to face financial difficulty, a decline in asset prices, liquidity problems and limited availability of credit. It is uncertain how long these effects will last, or whether economic and financial trends will worsen or improve. Such uncertain economic times may have a material adverse effect on our revenues, results of operations, financial condition and ability to raise capital. Some of our businesses, including the business units of our Consumer Health Division, may be particularly sensitive to declines in consumer spending. In addition, our Pharmaceuticals, Vaccines and Diagnostics, and Sandoz Divisions may not be immune to consumer cutbacks, particularly given the increasing requirements that patients pay a larger contribution toward their own healthcare costs. As a result, there is a risk that consumers may cut back on prescription drugs and vaccines, as well as consumer health products, to help cope with rising costs and difficult economic times.

        The economic crisis may also lead to a disruption or delay in the performance of third parties on which we rely for parts of our business, including licensees and collaboration partners, distributors, clinical trial providers and suppliers of products, intermediates and other goods or services. Such disruptions or delays could have an adverse effect on our business and results of operations.

        In addition, the varying impact of difficult economic times on the economies of different countries has impacted, and may continue to unpredictably impact, the translation of our operating results into US dollars, our reporting currency. The financial crisis may also cause the value of our investments in our pension plans to decrease, requiring us to increase our funding of those pension plans. In addition, the financial crisis may also result in a lower return on our financial investments, and a lower value on some of our assets. The financial crisis could also negatively impact the cost of financing or our ability to finance the second step of the Alcon acquisition on favorable terms.

        At the same time, significant changes and volatility in the consumer environment, the equity, credit and foreign exchange markets, and in the competitive landscape make it increasingly difficult for us to predict our revenues and earnings into the future. As a result, any revenue or earnings guidance or outlook which we have given or might give may be overtaken by events, or may otherwise turn out to be inaccurate. Though we endeavor to give reasonable estimates of future revenues and earnings at the time we give such guidance, under current market conditions there is a significant risk that such guidance or outlook will turn out to be, or to have been, incorrect.

Failure to obtain marketing exclusivity periods for new generic products, or to develop differentiated products, as well as intense competition from branded pharmaceuticals companies, may have an adverse effect on the success of our Sandoz Division.

        Our Sandoz Division achieves significant revenue opportunities when it secures and maintains exclusivity periods granted for generic products in certain markets—particularly the 180-day exclusivity period granted in the US by the Hatch-Waxman Act—and when it is able to develop differentiated, "difficult-to-make" products with few, if any, generic competitors. Failure to obtain and maintain these market opportunities could have an adverse effect on the success of Sandoz. In addition, the division faces intense competition from branded pharmaceuticals companies, which commonly take aggressive steps to limit the availability of exclusivity periods or to reduce their value. These activities may increase the costs and risks associated with our efforts to introduce generic products and may delay or entirely prevent their introduction.

Sandoz may not be able to realize the expected benefits of our significant investments in "biosimilar" drugs.

        Sandoz has made, and expects to continue to make, significant investments in the development of biotechnology-based products intended for sale as bioequivalent or "biosimilar" generic versions of

13


Table of Contents


currently marketed biotechnology products. The development of such products is costly and complex. In addition, to date, many countries, most notably the US, do not yet have a legislative or regulatory pathway which would permit such products to be sold in a manner in which the biosimilar product would be readily substitutable for the originator product. Significant delays in the development of such pathways, or significant impediments that may be built into such pathways, could diminish the value of the investments that Sandoz has made, and will continue to make, in its biotechnology operations.

        There is no guarantee that our efforts to develop and market these products will be successful or that we will be able to realize the expected benefits from our significant investment in this area. A failure to build and expand our position in biosimilars or to achieve the expected benefits from our investments in this area could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

A failure to develop differentiated vaccines or to bring key products to market in time for the relevant disease seasons could have an adverse effect on the success of our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division.

        The demand for some products marketed by our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division, such as influenza vaccines, is seasonal, while the demand for other vaccines, such as pediatric combination vaccines, depends on changes in birth rates in developed countries. Some vaccines that make an important contribution to the division's net sales and profits, particularly the key seasonal influenza vaccine products, are considered commodities, meaning that there are few therapeutic differences among the vaccines offered by competitors. As a result, these vaccines may suffer from price erosion due to excess product supply across the industry, or from intense price competition. In addition, the market for pandemic and seasonal influenza vaccines is experiencing an unprecedented period of significant volatility given the global A (H1N1) influenza pandemic. While deliveries of pandemic vaccines provided significant contributions to results in 2008 (from A (H5N1) vaccines) and 2009 (from A (H1N1) vaccines), no guarantee can be made that these types of influenza vaccines will provide contributions in 2010 and the future. The ability to develop differentiated, effective and safe vaccines, to gain approval for inclusion in national immunization recommendation lists, and to consistently produce and deliver high-quality vaccines in time for the relevant disease seasons are critical to the success of our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division. In particular, our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division has been working to develop two vaccines to combat different strains of meningococcal meningitis. These products are the primary products in the division's pipeline. If our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division were unable to successfully develop one or both of these products, or if the approval of either or both of these products were significantly delayed, it could have a material adverse effect on the medium- to long-term success of the division.

Our OTC Business Unit faces adverse impacts from increased competition, as well as potential questions of safety and efficacy.

        The OTC Business Unit of our Consumer Health Division sells over-the-counter medicines, many of which contain ingredients also sold by competitors in the OTC industry. Particularly in the US, our branded OTC products compete against "store brand" products that are made with the same active ingredients as ours. These products do not carry our trusted brand names, but they also do not carry the burden of the expensive advertising and marketing that helped to establish demand for the product. As a result, the store brands may be sold at lower prices. In recent years, consumers have increasingly begun to purchase store brand OTC products instead of branded products. In addition, in recent years, significant questions have arisen regarding the safety, efficacy and potential for misuse of certain products sold by our OTC Business Unit and its competitors. As a result, health authorities around the world have begun to re-evaluate some important over-the-counter products, leading to restrictions on the sale of some of them and even the banning of certain products. For example, in October 2008, acting in consultation with the FDA, we voluntarily re-labeled our US cough and cold medicines to indicate that these products should not be used in children under four years of age. Litigation has often followed actions such as these, particularly in the US. Additional actions and litigation regarding OTC products are possible in the future. These trends have had, and may continue to have, a significant adverse effect on the success of our OTC

14


Table of Contents


Business Unit. See also "—The after-effects of the recent economic and financial crisis may have a material adverse effect on our results" above.

The manufacture of our products is highly regulated and complex, and may encounter a variety of issues that lead to supply disruptions.

        The products we market, distribute and sell are either manufactured at our own dedicated manufacturing facilities or by third parties. In either case, we need to ensure that manufacturing processes comply with applicable regulations and manufacturing practices, as well as our own high quality standards. In particular, the manufacture of our products is heavily regulated by governmental authorities around the world, including the FDA. If we or our third-party suppliers fail to comply fully with such regulations then there could be a government-enforced shutdown of production facilities or production lines, which in turn could lead to product shortages. A failure to comply fully with such regulations could also lead to a delay in the approval of new products. For example, in August 2008, our Wilson, North Carolina facility received a Warning Letter from the FDA that raised concerns regarding the Wilson facility's compliance with FDA Good Manufacturing Practice regulations, and stated that until the FDA confirmed that the deficiencies had been corrected, the FDA could recommend disapproval of any pending NDAs, abbreviated NDAs or export certificate requests submitted by our Sandoz US affiliate. Voluntary recalls were made in September and in the fourth quarter of 2008 as part of the FDA review of the facility. While this Warning Letter was resolved in August 2009 following a successful FDA inspection, there can be no guarantee that we will not face similar issues in the future, or that we will successfully manage such issues when they arise.

        In addition, many of our products involve technically complex manufacturing processes or require a supply of highly specialized raw materials. For some products and raw materials, we may also rely on a single source of supply. As a result of these factors, the production of one or more of our products may be disrupted from time to time.

        A disruption in the supply of certain key products, or our failure to accurately predict demand, could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations. And because our products are intended to promote the health of patients, for some of our products, a supply disruption could subject us to lawsuits or to allegations that the public health, or the health of individuals, has been endangered.

If any of numerous key assumptions and estimates in calculating our pension plan obligations turn out to be different than our actual experience, we may be required to increase substantially our contributions to pension plans as well as our pension-related costs in the future.

        We sponsor pension and other post-employment benefit plans in various forms. These plans cover a significant portion of our current and former associates. We are required to make significant assumptions and estimates about future events in calculating the present value of expected future expense and liability related to these plans. These include assumptions about discount rates we apply to estimated future liabilities, expected returns on plan assets and rates of future compensation increases. In addition, our actuarial consultants provide our management with historical statistical information such as withdrawal and mortality rates in connection with these estimates. Assumptions and estimates used by Novartis may differ materially from the actual results we experience due to changing market and economic conditions (including the effects of the recent global economic and financial crisis), higher or lower withdrawal rates, or longer or shorter life spans of participants, among other variables. For example, a decrease in the discount rate we apply in determining the present value of expected future obligations of one-half of one percent would have increased our year-end defined benefit obligation by $1.1 billion. Any differences between our assumptions and estimates and our actual experience could have a material effect on our results of operations and financial condition. For more information on obligations under retirement and other post-employment benefit plans and underlying actuarial assumptions, see "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—Item 5.A Operating Results—Critical Accounting Policies and

15


Table of Contents


Estimates—Retirement and other post-employment plans" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 25". See also "—The after-effects of the recent economic and financial crisis may have a material adverse effect on our results" above.

Changes in tax laws or their application could adversely affect our results of operations.

        The integrated nature of our worldwide operations enables us to reduce the effective tax rate on our earnings because a portion of our earnings are taxed at more favorable rates in some jurisdictions. Changes in tax laws or their application with respect to matters such as transfer pricing, intercompany dividends, controlled corporations, and limitations on tax relief allowed on the interest on intercompany debt, could increase our effective tax rate and adversely affect our financial results.

Ongoing consolidation among our distributors may increase both the purchasing leverage of key customers and the concentration of credit risk.

        Increasingly, a significant portion of our global sales are made to a relatively small number of US drug wholesalers, retail chains and other purchasing organizations. For example, our three most important customers globally are all in the US, and accounted for approximately 8%, 7% and 6%, respectively, of Group net sales from continuing operations in 2009. The largest trade receivables outstanding were for these three customers, amounting to 9%, 6% and 6%, respectively, of the Group's trade receivables at December 31, 2009. The trend has been toward further consolidation among our distributors, especially in the US. As a result, our distributors are gaining additional purchasing leverage, which increases the pricing pressures facing our businesses. Moreover, we are exposed to a concentration of credit risk as a result of this concentration among our customers. If one or more of our major customers experienced financial difficulties, the effect on us would be substantially greater than in the past. This could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

An inability to attract and retain qualified personnel could adversely affect our business.

        We highly depend upon skilled personnel in key parts of our organization, and we invest heavily in recruiting and training qualified individuals. The loss of the service of key members of our organization—particularly senior members of our scientific and management teams—could delay or prevent the achievement of major business objectives. In addition, the success of our research and development activities is particularly dependent on our ability to attract and retain sufficient numbers of high-quality researchers and development specialists.

        Future economic growth will demand more talented associates and leaders, yet the market for talent will become increasingly competitive. Shifting demographic trends will result in fewer students, fewer graduates and fewer people entering the workforce in the Western world in the next 10 years. The supply of talent for key functional and leadership positions is decreasing, and a talent gap is clearly visible for some professions and geographies—engineers in Germany, for example. Recruitment is increasingly regional or global in specialized fields such as clinical development, biosciences, chemistry and information technology.

        Emerging markets are expected to be a driving force in global growth, but in countries like Russia and China there is a limited pool of executives with the training and international experience needed to work successfully in a global organization like Novartis. Moreover, younger generations around the world have changing expectations toward careers, engagement and the integration of work in their overall lifestyles. Geographic mobility is expected to decrease, and talent in emerging countries anticipate ample career opportunities closer to home than in the past.

        We face intense competition for an increasingly limited pool of qualified individuals from numerous pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, universities, governmental entities and other research

16


Table of Contents


institutions. As a result, we may be unable to attract and retain qualified individuals in sufficient numbers, which would have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Environmental liabilities may adversely impact our results of operations.

        The environmental laws of various jurisdictions impose actual and potential obligations on us to remediate contaminated sites. While we have set aside substantial provisions for worldwide environmental liabilities, there is no guarantee that additional costs will not be incurred beyond the amounts for which we have provided in the Group consolidated financial statements. If we are required to further increase our provisions for environmental liabilities in the future, or if we fail to properly manage environmental risks, this could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. For more detail regarding environmental matters, see "Item 4.D Property, Plants and Equipment—Environmental Matters" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 20."

Foreign exchange fluctuations may adversely affect our earnings and the value of some of our assets.

        In the recent past, the US dollar, our reporting currency, has suffered significant decreases in value against other world currencies. Because a significant portion of our earnings and expenditures are in currencies other than the US dollar, these decreases have had a significant impact on our reported net sales and earnings. In 2009, 35% of our net sales from continuing operations were made in US dollars, 31% in euros, 8% in Japanese yen, 3% in Swiss francs and 23% in other currencies. During the same period, 33% of our expenses from continuing operations arose in US dollars, 31% in euros, 12% in Swiss francs, 4% in Japanese yen and 20% in other currencies. As has happened in the recent past, changes in exchange rates between the US dollar and other currencies can result in increases or decreases in our sales, costs and earnings. Fluctuations in exchange rates between the US dollar and other currencies may also affect the reported value of our assets measured in US dollars and the components of shareholders' equity. For more information on the effects of currency fluctuations on our consolidated financial statements and on how we manage currency risk, see "Item 5.A Operating Results—Effects of Currency Fluctuations" and "Item 11. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Non-Product-Related Market Risk." See also "—The after-effects of the recent economic and financial crisis may have a material adverse effect on our results" above.

Significant disruptions of information technology systems or breaches of data security could adversely affect our business.

        Our business is increasingly dependent on increasingly complex and interdependent information technology systems, including Internet-based systems, to support business processes as well as internal and external communications. The size and complexity of our computer systems make them potentially vulnerable to breakdown, malicious intrusion and computer viruses which may result in the loss of key information or impairment of production and business processes. Data security breaches—whether by employees or others—may expose sensitive data to unauthorized persons. Such disruptions and breaches of security could materially and adversely affect our business.

Earthquakes could adversely affect our business.

        Our corporate headquarters, the headquarters of our Pharmaceuticals and Consumer Health Divisions, and certain of our major Pharmaceuticals Division production facilities are located near earthquake fault lines in Basel, Switzerland. In addition, other major facilities of our Pharmaceuticals, Vaccines and Diagnostics, Sandoz and Consumer Health Divisions are located near major earthquake fault lines in various locations around the world. In the event of a major earthquake, we could experience business interruptions, destruction of facilities and loss of life, all of which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

17


Table of Contents


Risks Related To Our ADSs

The price of our ADSs and the US dollar value of any dividends may be negatively affected by fluctuations in the US dollar/Swiss franc exchange rate.

        Our American Depositary Shares (ADSs) trade on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in US dollars. Since the shares underlying the ADSs are listed in Switzerland on the SIX Swiss Exchange (SIX) and trade in Swiss francs, the value of the ADSs may be affected by fluctuations in the US dollar/Swiss franc exchange rate. In addition, since any dividends that we may declare will be denominated in Swiss francs, exchange rate fluctuations will affect the US dollar equivalent of dividends received by holders of ADSs. If the value of the Swiss franc decreases against the US dollar, the price at which our ADSs trade may—and the value of the US dollar equivalent of any dividend will—decrease accordingly.

Holders of ADSs may not be able to exercise preemptive rights attached to shares underlying ADSs.

        Under Swiss law, shareholders have preemptive rights to subscribe for cash for issuances of new shares on a pro rata basis. Shareholders may waive their preemptive rights in respect of any offering at a general meeting of shareholders. Preemptive rights, if not previously waived, are transferable during the subscription period relating to a particular offering of shares and may be quoted on the SIX. US holders of ADSs may not be able to exercise the preemptive rights attached to the shares underlying their ADSs unless a registration statement under the US Securities Act of 1933 is effective with respect to such rights and the related shares, or an exemption from this registration requirement is available. In deciding whether to file such a registration statement, we would evaluate the related costs and potential liabilities, as well as the benefits of enabling the exercise by ADS holders of the preemptive rights associated with the shares underlying their ADSs. We cannot guarantee that a registration statement would be filed, or, if filed, that it would be declared effective. If preemptive rights could not be exercised by an ADS holder, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as depositary, would, if possible, sell the holder's preemptive rights and distribute the net proceeds of the sale to the holder. If the depositary determines, in its discretion, that the rights could not be sold, the depositary might allow such rights to lapse. In either case, the interest of ADS holders in Novartis would be diluted and, if the depositary allowed rights to lapse, holders of ADSs would not realize any value from the granting of preemptive rights.

Item 4.    Information on the Company


4.A  History and Development of Novartis

Novartis AG

        Novartis AG was incorporated on February 29, 1996 under the laws of Switzerland as a stock corporation (Aktiengesellschaft) with an indefinite duration. On December 20, 1996, our predecessor companies, Ciba-Geigy and Sandoz, merged into this new entity, creating Novartis. We are domiciled in and governed by the laws of Switzerland. Our registered office is located at the following address:

18


Table of Contents

        The Novartis Group is a multinational group of companies specializing in the research, development, manufacturing and marketing of a broad range of healthcare products led by innovative pharmaceuticals. Novartis AG, our Swiss holding company, owns, directly or indirectly, 100% of all significant operating companies. For a list of our significant operating subsidiaries, see "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 31."


Important Corporate Developments 2007-January 2010

        The following is an overview of certain important developments between 2007 and January 2010:

2010

January   Novartis announces its intention to gain full ownership of Alcon Inc. by first completing the April 2008 agreement with Nestlé S.A. to acquire a 77% majority stake in Alcon, and subsequently entering into an all-share direct merger with Alcon for the remaining 23% minority stake.


2009


 


 

December

 

Novartis enters into an agreement to acquire Corthera Inc. for $120 million plus potential milestone payments related to the successful development and commercialization of relaxin, a potential treatment for acute decompensated heart failure. The agreement is subject to regulatory approvals.

 

 

Novartis licenses to Prometheus Laboratories the rights to sell Proleukin in the US, commencing in February 2010. Novartis retains the right to sell Proleukin outside of the US.

November

 

Novartis announces $1 billion investment over the next five years to significantly expand the China Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research so that it would become the largest pharmaceutical research and development institute in China, and the third largest Novartis research institute worldwide.

 

 

Novartis enters into agreement to acquire 85% stake in Chinese vaccines company Zhejiang Tianyuan Bio-Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., which offers marketed vaccine products in China and research and development projects focused on viral and bacterial diseases, for $125 million.

 

 

Novartis opens large-scale flu cell culture vaccine and adjuvant manufacturing facility in Holly Springs, North Carolina, in partnership with US Department of Health and Human Services, Biomedical Research and Development Authority.

 

 

Novartis announces agreement to obtain rights outside the US to INC424, a promising Janus kinase inhibitor in Phase III development as well as worldwide rights to potential c-Met inhibitor compound, from Incyte Corporation for a combined upfront payment of $150 million as well as an immediate $60 million milestone payment and rights to potential future milestone payments and royalties based on future sales.

October

 

Novartis gains exclusive worldwide rights to PTK796, a potential first-in-class IV and oral broad-spectrum antibiotic in Phase III development, from Paratek Pharmaceuticals for upfront payment and eligibility for future milestone payments as well as royalties based on future sales.

19


Table of Contents

    Novartis enters into agreement for exclusive US and Canadian rights to Fanapt, an FDA-approved oral therapy for schizophrenia, with Vanda Pharmaceuticals Inc. for an upfront payment of $200 million, eligibility for additional milestone payments and sales royalties.

June

 

Novartis completes an open offer to acquire an additional stake in its majority-owned Indian subsidiary, Novartis India Ltd., increasing its holding to nearly 76.4% from the previous level of 50.9%. The transaction represented a total value of approximately $80 million.

 

 

Novartis successfully launches a EUR 1.5 billion notes issue.

May

 

Novartis signs definitive agreement to acquire for EUR 925 million ($1.3 billion) the specialty generic injectables business of EBEWE Pharma, providing Sandoz—the Group's generics division—an opportunity to create a global platform for growth while improving access for patients to many generic oncology medicines. The transaction closed in September.

February

 

Novartis gains worldwide rights to elinogrel (PRT128), a Phase II anti-clotting compound with potential to reduce risk of heart attack and stroke, from Portola Pharmaceuticals Inc. for an upfront payment of $75 million and rights to future milestone payments and royalties based on future sales.

 

 

Novartis successfully completes a $5 billion debt offering in the US.


2008


 


 

October

 

Novartis enters into an agreement to acquire the pulmonary business unit of Nektar Therapeutics for $115 million. The transaction closed in December.

July

 

Novartis acquires majority ownership in Speedel, a Swiss-based pharmaceuticals company, and commits to acquire all remaining shares in a mandatory public tender offer (completed in September 2008), with total costs estimated at approximately $888 million.

 

 

Novartis enters into a strategic partnership with Lonza, a Swiss pharmaceuticals manufacturing company, to accelerate growth of its biologic pharmaceuticals pipeline.

June

 

Novartis gains rights to PTZ601, a promising hospital antibiotic in clinical development, through the full acquisition of Protez Pharmaceuticals for $102 million in total and potential future payments of an additional $300 million.

 

 

Two Swiss franc bonds are successfully issued totaling CHF 1.5 billion.

April

 

Novartis strengthens its healthcare portfolio through an agreement with Nestlé S.A. under which Novartis obtained the right to acquire majority ownership in Alcon Inc., the world leader in eye care, including pharmaceutical, surgical and consumer products, in two steps. In the first step, completed in July 2008, Novartis acquired a 25% stake in Alcon from Nestlé for $10.4 billion. The optional second step provides Novartis the right to buy, and Nestlé the right to sell, the remaining 52% stake in Alcon held by Nestlé between January 2010 and July 2011 for up to approximately $28 billion.


2007


 


 

December

 

Novartis announces a new strategic initiative called "Forward" to enhance productivity by simplifying organizational structures, accelerating and decentralizing decision-making

20


Table of Contents

    and redesigning the way we operate. Through this initiative, we aim to reduce our cost base by approximately $1.6 billion by 2010 compared to 2007 levels. The initiative resulted in a restructuring charge of $444 million.

November

 

Novartis completes its fifth share repurchase program, initiated in July 2007. A total of 63,173,000 Novartis shares were repurchased for CHF 4 billion.

October

 

Novartis Biologics is established as a focused unit to accelerate and optimize research and development of innovative biologic medicines, which make up 25% of the Novartis pre-clinical product pipeline.

September

 

Novartis completes the sale of its Gerber Business Unit to Nestlé for $5.5 billion.

 

 

Novartis and Bayer Schering Pharma AG (Bayer Schering) receive regulatory approval to complete an agreement related to various rights for the multiple sclerosis treatment Betaseron®. Novartis received a one-time payment of approximately $200 million, principally for manufacturing facilities transferred to Bayer Schering, and received rights to market its own version of Betaseron® starting in 2009.

July

 

Novartis completes the sale of its Medical Nutrition Business Unit to Nestlé for $2.5 billion. Novartis enhances vaccines pipeline by gaining access to Intercell's key technologies and vaccines programs through an expanded strategic alliance.

 

 

Novartis completes its fourth share repurchase program, initiated in August 2004. A total of 47,575,000 Novartis shares were repurchased for CHF 3 billion.

April

 

Novartis announces a definitive agreement to divest Gerber to Nestlé for $5.5 billion, the final step in a divestment program to focus the Group's strategy on healthcare, with pharmaceuticals at the core.

        For information on our principal expenditures on property, plants and equipment, see "Item 4. Information on the Company—4.D Property, Plants & Equipment." For information on our significant investments in research and development, see the sections headed "Research and Development" included in the descriptions of our four operating divisions under "Item 4. Information on the Company—4.B Business Overview."


4.B  Business Overview

OVERVIEW

        Novartis provides healthcare solutions that address the evolving needs of patients and societies worldwide. Our broad portfolio includes innovative medicines, preventive vaccines and diagnostic tools, generic pharmaceuticals and consumer health products. Novartis is the only company to have leadership positions in each of these areas.

        The Group's businesses are organized in four global operating divisions:

21


Table of Contents

        Our strategy is to strengthen this healthcare portfolio through sustained investments in innovation, as well as through targeted acquisitions. In April 2008, we announced a significant agreement with Nestlé S.A. providing the right to acquire 77% majority ownership of Alcon Inc. (NYSE: ACL) in two steps and add this world leader in eye care to our portfolio. In July 2008, the first step was completed when Novartis acquired a 25% stake in Alcon for $10.4 billion in cash. On January 4, 2010, Novartis announced its intention to gain full ownership of Alcon Inc. (NYSE: ACL) by first completing the April 2008 agreement with Nestlé S.A. by taking the second step and acquiring Nestlé's remaining 52% majority stake in Alcon, and subsequently entering into an all-share direct merger with Alcon for the remaining 23% minority stake. Novartis believes this proposed merger, which would be implemented under the Swiss Merger Act, is in the interest of all stakeholders and will provide the needed clarity on Alcon's future. Alcon is expected to strengthen the Group's portfolio focused on healthcare and provide greater access to the fast-growing global eye care sector. Following the expected successful completion of the merger, Alcon would be established as a new Novartis division that incorporates Novartis and Alcon's highly complementary eye care assets.

        Novartis completed the divestment of its remaining non-healthcare businesses in 2007 with the sale of the Medical Nutrition (effective July 1) and Gerber (effective September 1) Business Units, which were previously included in the Consumer Health Division. These businesses were sold in separate transactions to Nestlé S.A.

        Novartis achieved net sales of $44.3 billion in 2009, while net income amounted to $8.5 billion. We invested $7.5 billion in Research & Development in 2009.

        Headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, we employed 99,834 full-time equivalent associates as of December 31, 2009, and have operations in approximately 140 countries around the world.


Pharmaceuticals Division

        Our Pharmaceuticals Division researches, develops, manufactures, distributes and sells branded prescription medicines in the following therapeutic areas: Cardiovascular and Metabolism; Oncology; Neuroscience and Ophthalmics; Respiratory; Immunology and Infectious Diseases; and Other. The Pharmaceuticals Division is organized into global business franchises responsible for the development and marketing of various products, as well as a business unit called Novartis Oncology, responsible for the global development and marketing of oncology products. Novartis Oncology is not required to be disclosed separately as a segment since it shares common long-term economic perspectives, customers, research, development, production, distribution and regulatory factors with the rest of the division. In 2009, the Pharmaceuticals Division accounted for $28.5 billion, or 65%, of Group net sales, and for $8.4 billion, or 78%, of Group operating income (excluding Corporate income and expense, net).


Vaccines and Diagnostics Division

        Our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division researches, develops, manufactures, distributes and sells preventive vaccines and diagnostic tools. Novartis Vaccines is a leading global developer and manufacturer of human vaccines. Key products include influenza, meningococcal, pediatric and travel vaccines. Novartis Diagnostics is a blood testing and molecular diagnostics business dedicated to preventing the spread of infectious diseases through novel blood-screening tools that protect the world's blood supply. In 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division accounted for $2.4 billion, or 5%, of Group net sales, and provided $372 million, or 3%, of the Group's operating income (excluding Corporate income and expense, net).


Sandoz Division

        Our Sandoz Division is a leading global generic pharmaceuticals company that develops, manufactures, distributes and sells prescription medicines, as well as pharmaceutical and biotechnological active substances, which are not protected by valid and enforceable third-party patents. The Sandoz

22


Table of Contents


Division has activities in Retail Generics, Anti-Infectives, Biopharmaceuticals and Oncology Injectables (following the acquisition of EBEWE Pharma, which was completed in September 2009). In Retail Generics, Sandoz develops, manufacture, distributes and sells active ingredients and finished dosage forms of medicines, as well as supplying active ingredients to third parties. In Anti-Infectives, Sandoz develops, manufactures, distributes and sells active pharmaceutical ingredients and intermediates, mainly antibiotics, for internal use by Retail Generics and for sale to third-party customers. In Biopharmaceuticals, Sandoz develops, manufactures, distributes and sells protein- or biotechnology-based products (known as "biosimilars" or follow-on biologics) and sells biotech manufacturing services to other companies. In Oncology Injectables, Sandoz develops, manufactures, distributes and sells cytotoxic products for the hospital market. Sandoz offers approximately 1,000 compounds in more than 130 countries. In 2009, Sandoz accounted for $7.5 billion, or 17%, of Group net sales, and for $1.1 billion, or 10%, of Group operating income (excluding Corporate income and expense, net).


Consumer Health Division

        Our Consumer Health Division consists of three business units: OTC (over-the-counter medicines), Animal Health and CIBA Vision. Each has its own research, development, manufacturing, distribution and selling capabilities. However, none are material enough to the Group to be separately disclosed as a segment. OTC offers readily available consumer medicine. Animal Health provides veterinary products for farm and companion animals. CIBA Vision markets contact lenses and lens care products. The Medical Nutrition and Gerber Business Units, which were previously included in the Consumer Health Division, were divested during 2007. The results of these business units have been reclassified and disclosed in this Form 20-F as discontinued operations in all applicable periods. In 2009, the Consumer Health Division (excluding discontinued operations) accounted for $5.8 billion, or 13%, of Group net sales, and for $1.0 billion, or 9%, of Group operating income (excluding Corporate income and expense, net).


PHARMACEUTICALS

Overview

        Our Pharmaceuticals Division is a world leader in offering innovation-driven, patent-protected medicines to patients and physicians.

        The Pharmaceuticals Division researches, develops, manufactures, distributes and sells branded pharmaceuticals in the following therapeutic areas:

        The Pharmaceuticals Division is organized into global business franchises responsible for the marketing of various products as well as a business unit called Novartis Oncology responsible for the global development and marketing of oncology products. The Oncology Business Unit is not required to be separately disclosed as a segment in our consolidated financial statements since it shares common long-term economic perspectives, customers, research, development, production, distribution and regulatory environments with the remainder of the Pharmaceuticals Division. The Pharmaceuticals Division is the largest contributor among the four divisions of Novartis and reported consolidated net sales of $28.5 billion in 2009, which represented 65% of the Group's net sales from continuing operations.

23


Table of Contents

        The division is made up of approximately 80 affiliated companies which together employed 56,310 full-time equivalent associates as of December 31, 2009, and sell products in approximately 140 countries. The product portfolio of the Pharmaceuticals Division includes more than 50 key marketed products, many of which are leaders in their respective therapeutic areas. In addition, the division's portfolio of development projects includes 145 potential new products, new indications or new formulations for existing products in various stages of clinical development.


Pharmaceuticals Division Products

        The following table and summaries describe certain key marketed products and recently launched products in our Pharmaceuticals Division. While we intend to sell all of our marketed products throughout the world, not all products and indications are currently available in every country. Compounds and new indications in development are, unless otherwise indicated, subject to required regulatory approvals and, in certain instances, contractual limitations. These compounds and indications are in various stages of development throughout the world. For some compounds, the development process is ahead in the US; for others, development in one or more other countries or regions is ahead of that in the US. It may not be possible to obtain regulatory approval for any or all of the new compounds and new indications referred to in this Form 20-F. In addition, for some of our products, we are required to conduct post-approval studies (Phase IV) to evaluate long-term effects or to gather information on the use of the products under special conditions. See "—Regulation" for further information on the approval process. Certain of the products listed below have lost patent protection or are otherwise subject to generic competition. Others are subject to patent challenges by potential generic competitors. See below and "—Intellectual Property" for further information on the patent status of our Pharmaceuticals Division's products.

24


Table of Contents

Key Marketed Products

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Diovan   valsartan   Hypertension
Heart failure
Post-myocardial infarction
  Capsule
Tablet
     
    Diovan HCT/
Co-Diovan
  valsartan and hydrochlorothiazide   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Eucreas   vildagliptin and metformin   Type 2 diabetes   Tablet
     
    Exforge   valsartan and amlodipine besylate   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Exforge HCT   valsartan, amlodipine besylate and hydrochlorothiazide   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Galvus   vildagliptin   Type 2 diabetes   Tablet
     
    Lescol/
Lescol XL
  fluvastatin sodium   Hypercholesterolemia and mixed dyslipidemia in adults.
Secondary prevention of major adverse cardiac events. Slowing the progression of atherosclerosis
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia in children and adolescents.
  Capsule
Tablet
     
    Lotensin/
Cibacen
  benazepril hydrochloride   Hypertension
Adjunct therapy in congestive heart failure
Progressive chronic renal insufficiency
  Tablet
     
    Lotensin
HCT/
Cibadrex
  benazepril hydrochloride and hydrochlorothiazide   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Lotrel   amlodipine besylate and benazepril hydrochloride   Hypertension   Capsule
     
    Starlix   nateglinide   Type 2 diabetes   Tablet
     
    Tekturna/Rasilez   aliskiren   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Tekturna HCT/Rasilez HCT   aliskiren and hydrochlorothiazide   Hypertension   Tablet
     
    Valturna   aliskiren and valsartan   Hypertension   Tablet
 

(1)   Not all indications are available in all countries.

25


Table of Contents

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
Oncology   Afinitor   everolimus   mTor inhibitor for advanced renal cell carcinoma   Tablet
     
    Exjade   deferasirox   Chronic iron overload due to blood transfusions   Dispersible tablet for oral suspension
     
    Femara   letrozole tablets/letrozole   Early breast cancer in postmenopausal women following surgery (upfront adjuvant therapy)
Early breast cancer in post-menopausal women following standard tamoxifen therapy (extended adjuvant therapy)
Advanced breast cancer in post-menopausal women (both as first- and second-line therapies)
  Tablet
     
    Gleevec/
Glivec
  imatinib mesylate/imatinib   Certain forms of chronic myeloid leukemia
Certain forms of gastrointestinal stromal tumor
Certain forms of acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans
Hypereosinophilic syndrome
Aggressive systemic mastocytosis
Myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative diseases
  Tablet
     
    Proleukin   aldesleukin   Metastatic renal cell carcinoma
Metastatic melanoma
  Lyophilized powder for IV infusion upon reconstitution and dilution
     
    Sandostatin
LAR &
Sandostatin
SC
  octreotide acetate for injectable suspension & octreotide acetate   Acromegaly
Symptoms associated with carcinoid tumors and other types of gastrointestinal neuroendocrine and pancreatic tumors
  Vial
Ampoule/pre-filled syringe
     
    Tasigna   nilotinib   Certain forms of chronic myeloid leukemia in patients resistant or intolerant to prior treatment including Gleevec/Glivec   Capsule
     
    Zometa   zoledronic acid   Reduce or delay skeletal-related events from bone metastases (cancer that has spread to the bones)   zoledronic acid for injection/zoledronic acid 4 mg
 

(1)   Not all indications are available in all countries.

26


Table of Contents

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
Neuroscience and Ophthalmics   Clozaril/
Leponex
  clozapine   Treatment-resistant schizophrenia
Prevention and treatment of recurrent suicidal behavior in patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder
  Tablet
     
    Comtan   entacapone   Parkinson's disease   Tablet
     
    Exelon & Exelon Patch   rivastigmine tartrate & rivastigmine transdermal system   Alzheimer's disease
Dementia associated with Parkinson's disease
  Capsule
Oral solution
Transdermal patch
     
    Extavia   Interferon beta-1b   Single demyelinating event with active inflammatory processes and relapsing forms of Multiple Sclerosis   Subcutaneous injection
     
    Fanapt   iloperidone   Schizophrenia   Tablet
     
    Focalin & Focalin XR   dexmethylphenidate HCl & dexmethylphenidate modified release   Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder   Tablet
Capsule
     
    Ritalin & Ritalin LA   methylphenidate HCl & methylphenidate HCl modified release   Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
  Tablet
Capsule
     
    Lucentis   ranibizumab   Wet age-related macular degeneration   Intravitreal injection
     
    Stalevo   carbidopa, levodopa and entacapone   Parkinson's disease   Tablet
     
    Tegretol   carbamazepine   Epilepsy
Pain associated with trigeminal neuralgia
Acute mania and bipolar affective disorders
  Tablet
Chewable tablet
Oral suspension
Suppository
     
    Trileptal   oxcarbazepine   Epilepsy   Tablet
Oral suspension
     
    Visudyne   verteporfin   Wet age-related macular degeneration
Pathological myopia
Ocular histoplasmosis
  Vial, intravenous infusion activated by non-thermal laser light
     
    Zaditor/
Zaditen
  ketotifen   Allergic conjunctivitis   Eye drops
 

(1)   Not all indications are available in all countries.

27


Table of Contents

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
Respiratory   Foradil   formoterol   Asthma
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
  Aerolizer (capsules)
Aerosol
     
    Tobi   tobramycin   Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in cystic fibrosis   Inhalation solution
     
    Xolair   omalizumab   Allergic asthma   Lyophilized powder for reconstitution as subcutaneous injection
 
Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Certican/Zortress   everolimus   Prevention of organ rejection (heart and kidney)   Tablet
Dispersible tablet for oral suspension
     
    Coartem/
Riamet
  artemether and lumefantrine   Plasmodium falciparum malaria or mixed infections that include Plasmodium falciparum
Standby emergency malaria treatment
  Tablet
Dispersible tablet for oral suspension
     
    Cubicin   daptomycin   Complicated skin and soft tissue infections (cSSTI)
Right-sided endocarditis (RIE) due to Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia when associated with RIE or cSSTI
  Powder for solution, injection or infusion
     
    Ilaris   canakinumab   Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS)   Lyophilized powder for reconstitution
     
    Lamisil   terbinafine   Fungal infection of the skin and nails caused by dermatophyte fungi Tinea capitis.
Fungal infections of the skin for the treatment of tinea corporis, tinea cruris, tinea pedis and yeast infections of the skin caused by the genus Candida (e.g. Candida albicans)
  Tablet
Cream
DermGel
Solution
Spray
     
    Myfortic   mycophenolic acid/mycophenolate sodium, USP   Prevention of graft rejection following kidney transplantation   Tablet
     
    Neoral   cyclosporine, USP Modified   Prevention of rejection following organ and bone marrow transplantation
Non-transplantation autoimmune conditions such as severe psoriasis, nephrotic syndrome, severe rheumatoid arthritis, atopic dermatitis or endogenous uveitis
  Capsule
Oral solution
     

(1)   Not all indications are available in all countries.

28


Table of Contents

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
    Reclast/
Aclasta
  zoledronic acid/zoledronic acid 5 mg   Treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women to reduce the incidence of hip vertebral and non-vertebral fractures, and to increase bone mineral density
Prevention of clinical fractures after hip fracture in men and women
Treatment of osteoporosis in men
Treatment and prevention of glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis
Prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis
Treatment of Paget's disease of the bone
  Intravenous infusion
     
    Simulect   basiliximab   Prevention of acute organ rejection in de novo renal transplantation   Vial for injection or infusion
     
    Tyzeka/Sebivo   telbivudine   Chronic hepatitis B   Tablet
     
    Voltaren/Cataflam   diclofenac sodium/potassium   Inflammatory forms of rheumatism
Pain management
  Tablet
Capsule
Drop
Ampoule
Suppository
Gel
Powder in sachet
Transdermal patch
 
Other   Combipatch/
Estalis/Estalis Sequi
  estradiol hemihydrate and norethisterone acetate   Treatment of symptoms of estrogen deficiency in postmenopausal women with an intact uterus
Prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women with an intact uterus
  Transdermal patch
     
    Elidel   pimecrolimus   Atopic dermatitis (eczema)   Cream
     
    Estraderm
TTS/
Estraderm
MX
  estradiol hemihydrate   Treatment of signs and symptoms of estrogen deficiency due to menopause
Prevention of accelerated postmenopausal bone loss
  Transdermal patch
     
    Estragest
TTS
Sequidot
  estradiol hemihydrate and norethisterone acetate   Treatment of symptoms of estrogen deficiency in postmenopausal women with an intact uterus
Prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis in women with an intact uterus
  Transdermal patch
     
    Enablex/Emselex   darifenacin   Overactive bladder   Tablet
     

(1)   Not all indications are available in all countries.

29


Table of Contents

 
Therapeutic area
  Product   Common name   Indication(1)   Formulation
    Famvir   famciclovir   Acute herpes zoster including ophthalmic herpes zoster and decreased duration of post herpetic neuralgia
Acute treatment of first episode and recurrent genital herpes infections, and for the suppression of recurrent genital herpes
Treatment of recurrent herpes labialis (cold sores)
Indicated in immunocompromised patients with herpes zoster or herpes simplex infections
  Tablet
     
    Miacalcin/
Miacalcic
  salmon calcitonin   Osteoporosis
Bone pain associated with osteolysis and/or osteopenia
Paget's disease
Neurodystrophic disorders (synonymous with algodystrophy or Sudeck's disease)
Hypercalcemia
  Nasal spray
Ampoule & multi-dose
Vial for injection or infusion
     
    Vivelle Dot/
Estradot
  estradiol hemihydrate   Estrogen replacement therapy for the treatment of the symptoms of menopause
Prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis
  Transdermal patch
 
(1)
Not all indications are available in all countries.


Selected Leading Products

30


Table of Contents

31


Table of Contents

Other Pharmaceuticals Products

32


Table of Contents

33


Table of Contents

34


Table of Contents


Compounds in Development

        The traditional model of development comprises three phases, which are defined as follows:

        Novartis, while essentially using the same model as a platform, has tailored the process to be simpler, more flexible and efficient. Our development paradigm consists of two parts: Exploratory and Confirmatory development. Exploratory development consists of clinical "proof of concept" (PoC) studies which are small clinical trials (typically 5-15 patients) that combine elements of traditional Phase I/II testing. These customized trials are designed to give early insights into issues such as safety, efficacy and toxicity for a drug in a given indication. Once a positive proof of concept has been established, the drug moves to the Confirmatory development stage. Confirmatory development has elements of traditional Phase II/III testing and includes trials aimed at confirming the safety and efficacy of the drug in the given indication leading up to submission of a dossier to health authorities for approval. Like traditional Phase III testing, this stage can also include trials which compare the drug to the current standard of care for the disease, in order to evaluate the drug's overall risk/benefit profile.

        The following table and summaries describe certain key compounds and new indications for existing products currently in Confirmatory development within our Pharmaceuticals Division

35


Table of Contents

 
Project/Product
  Common name   Mechanism of action   Potential indication/Disease area   Therapeutic area   Formulation/Route of administration   Planned filing dates/Current phase
ABF656   albinterferon alfa-2b   Interferon alpha-type activity (direct antiviral and immunomodulatory)   Chronic hepatitis C   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Injection   US, EU (registration)
 
ACZ885   canakinumab   Anti IL-1b monoclonal antibody   Refractory gout   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Injection   2010//III
             
            Systemic onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases       2011/III
             
            Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus   Cardiovascular and Metabolism       2012/II
 
AEB071   sotrastaurin   Protein kinase C inhibitor   Prevention of organ rejection   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Oral   ³ 2013/II
             
            Psoriasis           ³ 2013/II
 
AFQ056   TBD   mGluR5 antagonist   L-dopa induced dyskinesia in Parkinson's disease   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Oral   2012/II
 
AGO178   agomelatine   MT1 and MT2 agonist and 5-HT2c antagonist   Major depressive disorder   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Oral dispersible   2012/III
 
AIN457   TBD   Anti IL-17 monoclonal antibody   Uveitis   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Subcutaneous Intravenous injection   2011/III
             
            Psoriasis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases       ³ 2013/II
             
            Rheumatoid arthritis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases       ³ 2013/II
 
ASA404   vadimezan   Tumor vascular disrupting agent   Non-small cell lung cancer   Oncology   Intravenous   2011/III
 
BAF312   TBD   Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) receptor modulator   Multiple sclerosis   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Tablet   ³ 2013/II
 
BGS649   TBD   Aromatase inhibitor   Refractory endometriosis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Tablet   ³ 2013/II
 
CAD106   TBD   Beta-amyloid-protein immunotherapy   Alzheimer's disease   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Subcutaneous
Intramuscular injection
  ³ 2013/II
 
Certican/Zortress   everolimus   Growth-factor-induced immune cell proliferation inhibitor   Prevention of organ rejection—kidney   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Oral   US (registration)
             
            Prevention of organ rejection—liver           2011/III
 
Diovan and Starlix (free combination)   valsartan and nateglinide   ARB and insulin secretagogue   Prevention of new onset type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular morbidity and mortality (NAVIGATOR)   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Oral   2010/III
 
Elidel   pimecrolimus   Topical calcineurin inhibitor   Atopic dermatitis in infants   Other   Cream   2011/III
 

36


Table of Contents

 
Project/Product
  Common name   Mechanism of action   Potential indication/Disease area   Therapeutic area   Formulation/Route of administration   Planned filing dates/Current phase
EPO906   patupilone   Microtubule depolymerization inhibitor   Ovarian cancer   Oncology   Intravenous   2010/III
 
FTY720   fingolimod   Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor modulator   Multiple sclerosis   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Oral   US, EU
(registration)
 
INC424   TBD   Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor   Myelofibrosis   Oncology   Oral   2011/III
 
Joicela   lumiracoxib   Cyclooxygenase 2 inhibitor   Osteoarthritis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Oral   EU (registration)
 
LBH589   panobinostat   Histone deactelylase inhibitor   Multiple Myeloma   Oncology   Oral   ³ 2013/III
             
            Hodgkin's lymphoma           2010/II
 
LCI699   TBD   Aldosterone synthase inhibitor   Heart failure   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Intravenous infusion   ³ 2013/II
 
LCQ908   TBD   Diacylglycerol acyl transferase-1 inhibitor   Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   ³ 2013/II
 
LCZ696   TBD   ARB/NEP inhibitor   Heart failure   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Oral   ³ 2013/III
 
LDE225   TBD   Smoothened receptor/hedgehog signaling inhibitors   Gorlin's syndrome   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Cream   2010/II
 
Lucentis   ranibizumab   Anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody fragment   Diabetic macular edema   Neuroscience
And
Ophthalmics
  Intravitreal injection   EU (registration)
             
            Retinal Vein occlusion           2011/II
 
Mycograb   efungumab   Antibody fragment vs. fungal HSP90   Invasive candidiasis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Intravenous infusion   ³ 2013/III
 
NIC002   TBD   Nicotine Qbeta therapeutic vaccine   Smoking cessation   Respiratory   Injection   ³ 2013/II
 
NVA237   glycopyrronium bromide   Long-acting muscarinic antagonist   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Respiratory   Inhalation   2011/III
 
PKC412   midostaurin   Signal transduction inhibitor   Acute myeloid leukemia   Oncology   Oral   ³ 2013/III
             
            Aggressive systemic mastocytosis           2011/II
 
PRT128   elinogrel   P2Y12 inhibitor   Acute coronary syndrome, Chronic coronary heart disease   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   IV, Oral   ³ 2013/II
 
PTK796   TBD   Inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis   Complicated Staphylococcal skin and subcutaneous tissue infections   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Intravenous, oral   2012/III
 
PTZ601   TBD   Inhibition of bacterial cell wall synthesis   Staphylococcal skin and subcutaneous tissue infections, Hospital acquired bacterial infections such as pneumonia   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Intravenous infusion   2012/II
 

37


Table of Contents

 
Project/Product
  Common name   Mechanism of action   Potential indication/Disease area   Therapeutic area   Formulation/Route of administration   Planned filing dates/Current phase
QAB149   indacaterol   Long-acting beta-2 agonist   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Respiratory   Inhalation   EU (approved)
US (registration)
 
QAX028   TBD   Long-acting muscarinic antagonist   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Respiratory   Inhalation   ³ 2013/II
 
QMF149   indacaterol and mometasone furoate   Long-acting beta-2 agonist and inhaled corticosteroid   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Respiratory   Inhalation   ³ 2013/II
             
            Asthma           ³ 2013/II
 
QTI571 (Glivec)   imatinib mesylate/imatinib   Signal transduction inhibitor   Pulmonary arterial hypertension   Respiratory   Oral   2011/III
 
QVA149   indacaterol and glycopyrronium bromide   Long-acting beta-2 agonist and long-acting muscarinic antagonist   Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease   Respiratory   Inhalation   2012/II
 
RAD001 (Afinitor)   everolimus   mTOR inhibitor   Neuroendocrine tumors   Oncology   Tablet   2010/III
             
            Tuberous Sclerosis Complex—subependymal giant cell astrocytomas           2010/III
             
            Tuberous Sclerosis Complex—Angiomyolipoma           2011/III
             
            Breast cancer, Estrogen receptor positive           2012/III
             
            Breast cancer Her2-over-expressing, 1st line           ³ 2013/III
             
            Breast Her2-over-
expressing 2nd/3rd line
          ³ 2013/III
             
            Advanced Gastric Cancer           2012/III
             
            Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma           ³ 2013/III
             
            Solid tumors           ³ 2013/II
 

38


Table of Contents

 
Project/Product
  Common name   Mechanism of action   Potential indication/Disease area   Therapeutic area   Formulation/Route of administration   Planned filing dates/Current phase
SBR759   TBD   Calcium-free polymeric iron (III)-based phosphate binder   Hyperphosphatemia   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Powder for oral suspension   2011/II
 
SMC021   salmon calcitonin   Protects articular cartilage and strengthens subchondral bone   Osteoarthritis   Immunology and Infectious Diseases   Oral   2011/III
         
        Inhibition of osteoclast activity   Osteoporosis           2011/III
 
SOM230   pasireotide   Somatostatin analogue   Cushing's disease   Oncology   Subcutaneous injection   2010/III
             
            Refractory/resistant carcinoid syndrome       Intramuscular injection (monthly depot)   2011/III
             
            Acromegaly       Intramuscular injection (monthly depot)   2011/III
 
Tasigna   nilotinib   Signal transduction inhibitor   Newly diagnosed
chronic myeloid leukemia
  Oncology   Capsule   US, EU (registration)
             
            First line metastatic Gastrointestinal stromal tumor       Capsule   ³ 2013/III
             
            metastatic melanoma and KIT mutations       Capsule   2012/II
 

39


Table of Contents

 
Project/Product
  Common name   Mechanism of action   Potential indication/Disease area   Therapeutic area   Formulation/Route of administration   Planned filing dates/Current phase
TBM100   tobramycin   Aminoglycoside antibiotic   Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in cystic fibrosis patients   Respiratory   Inhalation   EU (registration)
US
2010/III
 
Tekturna ATMOSPHERE   aliskiren   Direct renin inhibitor   Heart failure   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   ³2013/III
 
Tekturna ALTITUDE   aliskiren   Direct renin inhibitor   Renal and cardiovascular events in type 2 diabetes   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   2012/III
 
Tekturna/Rasilez single-pill combination   aliskiren and amlodipine   Direct renin inhibitor and calcium channel blocker   Hypertension   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   US, EU
(registration)
 
Tekturna/Rasilez single-pill combination   aliskiren, amlodipine and hydrochlorothiazide   Direct renin inhibitor, calcium channel blocker and diuretic   Hypertension   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   2010/III
 
TKI258   Dovitinab lactate   VEGFR1-3, FGFR 1-3, PDGFR angiogenesis inhibitor   Renal cell carcinoma   Oncology   Oral   2012/II
 
Valturna/Rasival single-pill combination   aliskiren and valsartan   Direct renin inhibitor and angiotensin II receptor antagonist   Hypertension   Cardiovascular and Metabolism   Tablet   US (approved)
EU (registration)
 
Xolair   omalizumab   Anti-IgE monoclonal antibody   Allergic asthma in patients aged 6 to less than 12 years   Respiratory   Lyophilized powder for reconstitution as subcutaneous injection   US (registration)
 
Zometa   zoledronic acid   Osteoclast inhibitor   Adjuvant breast cancer   Oncology   Intravenous   US, EU (registration)
 

Key Compounds in Development (select products in Phases II, III and Registration)

40


Table of Contents

41


Table of Contents

42


Table of Contents

43


Table of Contents

44


Table of Contents

Projects Terminated in 2009

45


Table of Contents


Principal Markets

        The Pharmaceuticals Division has a commercial presence in approximately 140 countries worldwide, but net sales are generally concentrated in the US, Europe and Japan, which together accounted for 81% of 2009 net sales. At the same time, sales from fast growing "emerging growth markets" have become increasingly important to us. See "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—5.A Operating Results—Factors Affecting Results of Operations—Fundamental Drivers Remain Strong—Emerging Markets Grow Faster than Developed Countries." The following table sets forth certain data relating to our principal markets in the Pharmaceuticals Division.

Pharmaceuticals
  2009 Net sales to
third parties
 
 
  ($ millions)
  (%)
 

United States

    9,542     33  

Americas (except the United States)

    2,450     9  

Europe

    10,467     37  

Japan

    3,138     11  

Rest of the World

    2,941     10  
           

Total

    28,538     100  
           

        Many of our Pharmaceuticals Division's products are used for chronic conditions that require patients to consume the product over long periods of time, from months to years. Net sales of the vast majority of our products are not subject to material changes in seasonal demand.


Production

        The primary goal of our manufacturing and supply chain management program is to ensure the uninterrupted, timely and cost-effective supply of products that meet all product specifications. Pharmaceutical manufacturing is regulated by "Good Manufacturing Practices" (GMP) and other regulations, which are monitored by regulatory agencies such as the FDA in the US.

        We manufacture our products at five bulk chemical and 15 pharmaceutical production facilities as well as three biotechnology sites. Bulk chemical production involves the manufacture of therapeutically active compounds, mainly by chemical synthesis or by a biological process such as fermentation. Pharmaceutical production involves the manufacture of "galenical" forms of pharmaceutical products such as tablets, capsules, liquids, ampoules, vials and creams. Major bulk chemical sites are located in Basel, Switzerland; Grimsby, UK; Ringaskiddy, Ireland and Changshu, China. Significant pharmaceutical production facilities are located in Stein, Switzerland; Wehr, Germany; Torre, Italy; Barbera, Spain; Suffern, New York; Sasayama, Japan and in various other locations in Europe, including Huningue, France, Horsham, UK and Kurtkoy, Turkey. Our three biotechnology plants are in Huningue, France, Basel, Switzerland and Vacaville, California.

        During clinical trials, which can last several years, the manufacturing process for a particular product is rationalized and refined. By the time clinical trials are completed and products are launched, the

46


Table of Contents


manufacturing processes have been extensively tested and are considered stable. However, improvements to these manufacturing processes may continue over time.

        Raw materials for the manufacturing process are either produced in-house or purchased from a number of third-party suppliers. Where possible, our policy is to maintain multiple supply sources so that the business is not dependent on a single or limited number of suppliers. However, our ability to do so may at times be limited by regulatory or other requirements. We monitor market developments that could have an adverse effect on the supply of essential materials. Our suppliers of raw materials are required to comply with Novartis quality standards.

        While we have not experienced material supply interruptions in the past, there can be no assurance that supply will not be interrupted in the future as a result of unforeseen circumstances. The manufacture of our products is heavily regulated, making supply never an absolute certainty. If we or our third-party suppliers fail to comply fully with regulations then there could be a product recall or an enforced shutdown of production facilities. We have implemented a global manufacturing strategy to maximize business continuity in case of such events or other unforeseen catastrophic events.


Marketing and Sales

        The Pharmaceuticals Division serves customers with approximately 5,426 field force representatives in the US (including supervisors), and an additional 18,338 in the rest of the world. These trained representatives, where permitted by law, present the therapeutic and economic benefits of our products to physicians, pharmacists, hospitals, insurance groups and managed care organizations. We are seeing the increasing influence of customer groups beyond the prescribers, and Novartis is responding by adapting our business practices.

        Although specific distribution patterns vary by country, Novartis generally sells its prescription drugs primarily to wholesale and retail drug distributors, hospitals, clinics, government agencies and managed healthcare providers.

        In the US, certain products are advertised by way of television, newspaper and magazine advertising. Novartis also pursues co-promotion/co-marketing opportunities as well as licensing and distribution agreements with other companies when legally permitted as well as economically attractive.

        Since the implementation of a new US business model last year, Novartis has been able to better address customer needs and differences in local market dynamics. The model allows the regional sales forces to be tailored to reach healthcare practitioners in different ways. New account manager positions focused on reaching numerous stakeholders in the treatment decision pathway have been created, and we have geographically adjusted the placement of our representatives to match the local demand for products.

        The marketplace for healthcare is evolving with the consumer becoming a more influential stakeholder in their healthcare decisions and looking for added-value solutions to meet their changing needs. Where permitted by law, Novartis is seeking to tap into the power of the patient, delivering innovative solutions to drive loyalty and engagement.


Competition

        The global pharmaceutical market is highly competitive, and we compete against other major international corporations with substantial financial and other resources, which sell branded prescription pharmaceutical products. Competition within the industry is intense and extends across a wide range of commercial activities, including pricing, product characteristics, customer service, sales and marketing, and research and development.

        As is the case with other pharmaceutical companies selling patented pharmaceuticals, Novartis faces ever-increasing challenges from companies selling generic forms of our products following the expiry of

47


Table of Contents


patent protection, or of products which compete with our products. Generic companies may also gain entry to the market through successfully challenging our patents, but we vigorously use legally permissible remedies to defend our patent rights from generic challenges. In addition, we also face competition from over-the-counter (OTC) products that do not require a prescription from a physician.


Research and Development

        We are among the leaders in the pharmaceuticals industry in terms of research and development investment. In 2009, we invested approximately $5.8 billion in Pharmaceuticals Division research and development, which represented 20.5% of the division's total net sales. Our Pharmaceuticals Division invested $5.7 billion and $5.1 billion in research and development in 2008 and 2007 respectively. There are currently 145 projects in clinical development.

        The discovery and development of a new drug is a lengthy process, usually requiring 10 to 15 years from the initial research to bringing a drug to market, including six to eight years from Phase I clinical trials to market. At each of these steps, there is a substantial risk that a compound will not meet the requirements to progress further. In such an event, we may be required to abandon a compound in which we have made a substantial investment.

Research program

        Our Research program is responsible for the discovery of new drugs. In 2003, we established the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR). NIBR is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where more than 1,400 scientists and associates conduct research into disease areas such as cardiovascular and metabolism disease, infectious disease, oncology, muscle disorders and ophthalmology. The Cambridge-based discovery research platforms include Developmental and Molecular Pathways, NIBR Biologics Center and Global Discovery Chemistry. An additional 2,300 scientists and technology experts conduct research in Switzerland, UK, Japan, Austria, China and two other US sites. Research is conducted at these sites in the areas of neuroscience, autoimmune disease, oncology, cardiovascular disease, dermatology, gastrointestinal disease and respiratory disease. In addition, research platforms such as the Center for Proteomic Chemistry are headquartered in the NIBR site in Basel, Switzerland. In November 2009, we announced that we would invest $1 billion over the next five years to increase the size of the NIBR site in Shanghai, China, so that it would become the largest pharmaceutical research and development institute in China, and the third-largest Novartis research institute worldwide.

        Our principal goal is to discover new medicines for diseases with high unmet medical need. To do so we focus our work in areas where we have sufficient scientific understanding and believe we have the potential to dramatically change the practice of medicine. This requires the hiring and retention of the best talent, a focus on fundamental disease mechanisms that are relevant across different disease areas, continuous improvement in technologies for drug discovery and potential therapies, close alliance with clinical colleagues, and the establishment of appropriate external complementary alliances.

        All drug candidates are taken to the clinic via "proof-of-concept" trials to enable rapid testing of the fundamental efficacy of the drug while collecting basic information on pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability, and adhering to the guidance for early clinical testing set forth by health authorities.

        Over the past five years, the output from NIBR has grown progressively. The portfolio of pre-clinical and early clinical New Molecular Entities has increased more than 50% in the last four years. Biologic medicines—antibodies and protein therapeutics—have grown to constitute 25% of NIBR's pre-clinical portfolio.

48


Table of Contents

Development program

        The focus of our Development program is to determine whether new drugs are safe and effective in humans. As previously described (see "—Compounds in Development"), we view the development process as generally consisting of an Exploratory phase where a "proof of concept" is established, and a Confirmatory phase where this concept is confirmed in large numbers of patients. Within this paradigm, clinical trials of drug candidates generally proceed through the traditional three phases: I, II and III. In Phase I clinical trials, a drug is usually tested with about 5 to 15 patients. The tests study the drug's safety profile, including the safe dosage range. The studies also determine how a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized and excreted, and the duration of its action. In Phase II clinical trials, the drug is tested in controlled studies of approximately 100 to 300 volunteer patients to assess the drug's effectiveness and safety, and to establish a proper dose. In Phase III clinical trials, the drug is further tested on larger numbers of volunteer patients in clinics and hospitals. In each of these phases, physicians monitor volunteer patients closely to assess the drug's safety and efficacy. The vast amount of data that must be collected and evaluated makes clinical testing the most time-consuming and expensive part of new drug development. The next stage in the drug development process is to seek registration for the new drug. See "—Regulation."

Alliances and acquisitions

        Our Pharmaceuticals Division enters into business development agreements with other pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies and with academic institutions in order to develop new products and access new markets. We license products that complement our current product line and are appropriate to our business strategy. Therapeutic area strategies have been established to focus on alliances and acquisition activities for key disease areas/indications that are expected to be growth drivers in the future. We review products and compounds we are considering licensing using the same criteria as we use for our own internally discovered drugs.


Regulation

        The international pharmaceutical industry is highly regulated. Regulatory authorities around the world administer numerous laws and regulations regarding the testing, approval, manufacturing, importing, labeling and marketing of drugs, and also review the safety and efficacy of pharmaceutical products. In particular, extensive controls exist on the non-clinical and clinical development of pharmaceutical products. These regulatory requirements, and the implementation of them by local health authorities around the globe, are a major factor in determining whether a substance can be developed into a marketable product, and the amount of time and expense associated with that development.

        Health authorities, including those in the US, EU, Switzerland and Japan, have high standards of technical evaluation. The introduction of new pharmaceutical products generally entails a lengthy approval process. Of particular importance is the requirement in all major countries that products be authorized or registered prior to marketing, and that such authorization or registration be subsequently maintained. In recent years, the registration process has required increased testing and documentation for clearance of new drugs, with a corresponding increase in the expense of product introduction.

        To register a pharmaceutical product, a registration dossier containing evidence establishing the quality, safety and efficacy of the product must be submitted to regulatory authorities. Generally, a therapeutic product must be registered in each country in which it will be sold. In every country, the submission of an application to a regulatory authority does not guarantee that approval to market the product will be granted. Although the criteria for the registration of therapeutic drugs are similar in most countries, the formal structure of the necessary registration documents and the specific requirements, including risk tolerance, of the local health authorities varies significantly from country to country. It is possible that a drug can be registered and marketed in one country while the registration authority in another country may, prior to registration, request additional information from the pharmaceutical

49


Table of Contents


company or even reject the product. It is also possible that a drug may be approved for different indications in different countries.

        The registration process generally takes between six months and several years, depending on the country, the quality of the data submitted, the efficiency of the registration authority's procedures and the nature of the product. Many countries provide for accelerated processing of registration applications for innovative products of particular therapeutic interest. In recent years, intensive efforts have been made among the US, the EU and Japan to harmonize registration requirements in order to achieve shorter development and registration times for medical products. However, the requirement in many countries to negotiate selling prices or reimbursement levels with government regulators can substantially extend the time until a product may finally be launched to the market.

        The following provides a summary of the regulatory processes in the principal markets served by Pharmaceuticals Division affiliates:

United States

        In the US, applications for drug registration are submitted to and reviewed by the FDA. The FDA regulates the testing, manufacturing, labeling and approval for marketing of pharmaceutical products intended for commercialization in the US. The FDA continues to monitor the safety of pharmaceutical products after they have been approved for marketing in the US market. The pharmaceutical development and registration process is typically intensive, lengthy and rigorous. When a pharmaceutical company has gathered data which it believes sufficiently demonstrates a drug's quality, safety and efficacy, then the company may file a New Drug Application (NDA) or biologics license application (BLA), as applicable, for the drug. The NDA or BLA must contain all the scientific information that has been gathered about the drug and typically includes information regarding the clinical experiences of all patients tested in the drug's clinical trials. A Supplemental New Drug Application (sNDA) or BLA amendment must be filed for new indications for a previously registered drug. Throughout the life cycle of a product, the FDA also requires compliance with standards relating to good laboratory, clinical and manufacturing practices.

        Once an NDA or BLA is submitted, the FDA assigns reviewers from its biopharmaceutics, chemistry, clinical microbiology, pharmacology/toxicology, and statistics staff. After a complete review, these content experts then provide written evaluations of the NDA or BLA. These recommendations are consolidated and are used by the Senior FDA staff in its final evaluation of the NDA/BLA. Based on that final evaluation, FDA then provides to the NDA or BLA's sponsor an approval, or a "complete response" letter if the NDA or BLA application is not approved. If not approved, the letter will state the specific deficiencies in the NDA or BLA which need to be addressed. The sponsor must then submit an adequate response to the deficiencies in order to restart the review procedure.

        Once the FDA has approved an NDA or BLA or sNDA or BLA amendment, the company can make the new drug available for physicians to prescribe. The drug owner must submit periodic reports to the FDA, including any cases of adverse reactions. For some medications, the FDA requires additional post-approval studies (Phase IV) to evaluate long-term effects or to gather information on the use of the product under special conditions.

European Union

        In the EU, there are three main procedures for application for authorization to market pharmaceutical products in the EU Member States, the Centralized Procedure, the Mutual Recognition Procedure and the Decentralized Procedure. It is also possible to obtain a national authorization for products intended for commercialization in a single EU member state only, or for additional indications for licensed products.

50


Table of Contents

        Under the Centralized Procedure, applications are made to the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) for an authorization which is valid for the European Community. The Centralized Procedure is mandatory for all biotechnology products and for new chemical entities in cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, diabetes and AIDS, autoimmune diseases or other immune disfunctions and optional for other new chemical entities or innovative medicinal products or in the interest of public health. When a pharmaceutical company has gathered data which it believes sufficiently demonstrates a drug's quality, safety and efficacy, then the company may submit an application to the EMEA. The EMEA then receives and validates the application, and appoints a Rapporteur and Co-Rapporteur to review it. The entire review cycle must be completed within 210 days, although there is a "clock stop" at day 120, to allow the company to respond to questions set forth in the Rapporteur and Co-Rapporteur's Assessment Report. When the company's complete response is received by the EMEA, the clock restarts on day 121. If there are further aspects of the dossier requiring clarification, the EMEA will then request an Oral Explanation on day 180, in which the sponsor must appear before the EMEA's Scientific Committee (the CHMP) to provide the requested additional information. On day 210, the CHMP will then take a vote to recommend the approval or non-approval of the application. The final decision under this Centralized Procedure is an EU Community decision which is applicable to all Member States. This decision occurs on average 60 days after a positive CHMP recommendation.

        Under the Mutual Recognition Procedure (MRP), the company first obtains a marketing authorization from a single EU member state, called the Reference Member State (RMS). In the Decentralized Procedure (DCP) the application is done simultaneously in selected or all Member States if a medicinal product has not yet been authorized in a Member State. During the DCP, the RMS drafts an Assessment Report within 120 days. Within an additional 90 days the Concerned Member States (CMS) review the application and can issue objections or requests for additional information. On Day 90, each CMS must be assured that the product is safe and effective, and that it will cause no risks to the public health. Once an agreement has been reached, each Member State grants national marketing authorization for the product.

        After the Marketing Authorizations have been granted, the company must submit periodic safety reports to the EMEA (if approval was granted under the Centralized Procedure) or to the National Health Authorities (if approval was granted under the DCP or the MRP). In addition, several Pharmacovigilance measures must be implemented and monitored including Adverse Event collection, evaluation and expedited reporting and implementation as well as up-date of Risk Management Plans.

        European Marketing Authorizations have an initial duration of five years. After this time, the Marketing Authorization may be renewed by the competent authority on the basis of re-evaluation of the risk/benefit balance. Once renewed the Marketing Authorization is valid for an unlimited period. Any Marketing Authorization which is not followed within three years of its granting by the actual placing on the market of the corresponding medicinal product shall cease to be valid.

Japan

        In Japan, applications for new products are made through the Pharmaceutical and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA). Once an NDA is submitted, a review team is formed consisting of specialized officials of the PMDA, including chemistry/manufacturing, non-clinical, clinical and biostatistics. While a team evaluation is carried out, a data reliability survey and Good Clinical Practice inspection are carried out by the Office of Conformity Audit of the PMDA. Team evaluation results are passed to the PMDA's external experts who then report back to the PMDA. After a further team evaluation, a report is provided to the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare (MHLW), which makes a final determination for approval and refers this to the Council on Drugs and Foods Sanitation which then advises the MHLW on final approvability. Marketing and distribution approvals require a review to determine whether or not the product in the application is suitable as a drug to be manufactured and distributed by a person who has obtained a manufacturing and distribution business license for the type of drug concerned and

51


Table of Contents


confirmation that the product has been manufactured in a plant compliant with Good Manufacturing Practices.

        Once the MHLW has approved the application and has listed its national health insurance price, the company can make the new drug available for physicians to prescribe and obtain reimbursement. For some medications, the MHLW requires additional post-approval studies (Phase IV) to evaluate safety, effects and/or to gather information on the use of the product under special conditions. The MHLW also requires the drug's sponsor to submit periodic safety update reports. Within three months from the specified re-examination period, which is designated at the time of the approval of the application for the new product, the company must submit a re-examination application to enable the drug's safety and efficacy to be reassessed against approved labeling by the PMDA.


Price Controls

        In most of the markets where we operate, the prices of pharmaceutical products are subject to both direct and indirect price controls and to drug reimbursement programs with varying price control mechanisms. Due to increasing political pressure and governmental budget constraints, we expect these mechanisms to remain in place—and to perhaps even be strengthened—and to have a negative influence on the prices we are able to charge for our products.

52


Table of Contents

        We expect that pressures on pricing will continue worldwide, and may increase. Because of these pressures, there can be no certainty that in every instance we will be able to charge prices for a product that, in a particular country or in the aggregate, enable us to earn an adequate return on our investment in that product.


Intellectual Property

        We attach great importance to patents, trademarks, and know-how in order to protect our investment in research and development, manufacturing and marketing. It is our policy to seek the broadest protection available under applicable laws for significant product developments in all major markets. Among other things, patents may cover the products themselves, including the product's active ingredient and its formulation. Patents may cover processes for manufacturing a product, including processes for manufacturing intermediate substances used in the manufacture of the products. Patents may also cover particular uses of a product, such as its use to treat a particular disease, or its dosage regimen. In addition, patents may cover assays or tests for certain diseases or biomarkers, which will improve patient outcomes when administered certain drugs.

        The protection offered by such patents extends for varying periods depending on the grant, duration and enforceability of patents in the various countries. The protection afforded, which may vary from country to country, depends upon the type of patent and its scope of coverage. The duration of the protection will further depend on patent expiry data and the availability of patent term extensions, as well as other regulatory provisions for exclusivity such as data exclusivity, orphan drug status and pediatric exclusivity.

        The following is a summary of the patent expiration dates for certain key products of our Pharmaceuticals Division. In addition, if a product is subject to significant patent litigation, we describe it below:

53


Table of Contents

54


Table of Contents

55


Table of Contents

        The loss of patent protection can have a significant adverse impact on our Pharmaceuticals Division. We work to offset these negative effects by developing process and product improvements, protecting those improvements with patents, by positioning many of our products in specific market niches, and marshalling our efforts to discover new therapeutic compounds. However, there can be no assurance that these strategies will be effective in the future to ensure competitive advantage, or that we will be able to avoid substantial adverse effects from the loss of patent protection in the future.

        There is also a risk that some countries, particularly countries in the developing world, may seek to impose limitations on the availability of patent protection for pharmaceutical products, or on the extent to which such protections may be enforced. In countries that adopt such measures, generic manufacturers will be able to introduce competing products earlier than they otherwise would under a patent protection regime.

56


Table of Contents

        In addition, even though we may own or license patents protecting our products, and conduct pre-launch freedom-to-operate analyses, a third party may nevertheless claim that one of our products infringes an unlicensed third-party patent.


VACCINES AND DIAGNOSTICS

        Our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division is a leader in the research, development, manufacturing and marketing of vaccines and diagnostic tools worldwide. As of December 31, 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division employed 5,416 full-time equivalent associates worldwide in 20 countries. In 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division had consolidated net sales of $2.4 billion representing 5% of total Group net sales from continuing operations.

        The Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics Division is a leading manufacturer of human vaccines, and is growing at double-digit rates. Our vaccine products include influenza, meningococcal meningitis, pediatric, adult and travel vaccines. Our diagnostics business, which operates under the name Chiron, is dedicated to preventing the spread of infectious diseases through the development and marketing of novel blood-screening tools.

        The current product portfolio of our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division includes more than 20 marketed products, many of which are their respective market leaders. In addition, the division's portfolio of development projects includes more than 15 potential new products in various stages of clinical development.

        Influenza vaccines are a core franchise of the Division, with brands that include Fluvirin, Fluad, Agrippal, Begrivac, Optaflu and AgriFlu. Today Novartis is among the world's largest producers of influenza vaccines, and a major supplier to the US, UK, Italy, Germany and other countries. According to the World Health Organization, every year an estimated 3 million to 5 million people worldwide become seriously ill from influenza, and as many as 500,000—primarily children and the elderly—die from the ensuing complications. This year, we completed our entire shipment of 27 million doses of seasonal influenza vaccine to the US for the 2009/2010 season in October, earlier than in previous years, in anticipation of demand for earlier vaccination with seasonal influenza vaccine created by the global A (H1N1) influenza pandemic.

        We also produced and shipped our first doses A (H1N1) vaccines within four months after the declaration of the A (H1N1) influenza pandemic by the World Health Organization on June 11, 2009. On September 15 the FDA approved Novartis Fluvirin Influenza (A) H1N1 monovalent vaccine. On September 25 Focetria A (H1N1) received a positive opinion from CHMP and was approved for marketing in Europe on October 1. And Celtura (adjuvanted cell-culture based vaccine) also received its first approvals in November, in Germany and Switzerland.

        This activity followed the November 2009 opening of the division's cell culture-based manufacturing facility at Holly Springs, North Carolina. This facility was constructed following the award by the US Department of Health and Human Services to Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics of a contract to support the design, construction, validation and licensing of the facility, to provide a pre-pandemic supply of avian influenza vaccine, and to provide the capacity to manufacture 150 million doses of pandemic vaccine within six months of declaration of an influenza pandemic. In addition, the FDA approved the new Novartis Site 4 in Liverpool, UK, and production capacity was increased in Marburg, Germany to enable us to increase our production of vaccines.

        Menveo (MenACWY-CRM), a quadrivalent conjugate vaccine for the prevention of the A, C, Y and W-135 strains of meningococcal meningitis, was submitted for marketing authorization in the US and Europe in 2008 for use in individuals 11-55 years old. In December 2009, the CHMP recommended Menveo for approval in the EU. We expect a decision from the European Commission during the first quarter of 2010. In the US, we received a Complete Response letter from the FDA in June 2009, requesting additional information on the clinical and Chemistry Manufacturing and Control sections of

57


Table of Contents


the Biologics License Application. No new clinical trials were requested. We submitted full responses to all of FDA's questions in August 2009. US approval for the adolescent/adult indication is now expected in the first quarter of 2010. Our Menveo Phase III program for the additional indication of the prevention of the disease in persons aged 2 months to 10 years old is ongoing, and submission of Menveo for use in infants is expected in 2010 in Europe and 2011 in the US.

        The menB vaccine has shown potential to be the first vaccine to protect infants as young as six months from the B strain of meningococcal meningitis. Phase III studies are progressing in Europe, where patient enrollment has been completed and a regulatory submission remains on track for 2010. In the US, discussions are planned for 2010 with the FDA to determine the scope of Phase III clinical trials.

        Ixiaro vaccine for the prevention of Japanese encephalitis in travelers to Asia received FDA approval on March 30, 2009 and Marketing Authorization in Europe on April 2, 2009. It is the only licensed JE vaccine in the US, and as planned Ixiaro was launched starting in the first half of 2009 in the US, UK, Germany and other European countries.

        Novartis Vaccines continued to expand geographically, by offering our first vaccine in Japan, and with our announcement in November 2009, that we had entered into an agreement to acquire an 85% stake in the Chinese vaccines company Zhejiang Tianyuan Bio-Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., which offers marketed vaccine products in China. In addition, Quinvaxem (for childhood diseases) continues to penetrate emerging markets, and we have had significant activity in Brazil, entering into an agreement in 2009 with the Fundação Ezequiel Dias in Brazil for meningitis C vaccine technology transfer, and commencing construction of a vaccines manufacturing facility in that country.

        Our diagnostics collaboration with Gen-Probe Inc. was extended in early 2009, until 2025. Gen-Probe and Novartis collaborate to develop, manufacture and sell equipment, tests and reagents to test blood donations for the presence of infectious diseases (HIV, HCV, HBV and WNV) using nucleic acid technologies (NAT). The previous agreement was set to expire in 2013. Novartis is responsible for world wide sales, marketing and distribution of instruments and assays used to detect HIV, HCV, HBV and WNV in donated blood. Gen-Probe manufactures these products. The two companies jointly conduct the R&D activities needed to support this product line. During 2009 Novartis also signed a multi-year agreement with the American Red Cross to begin additional testing of blood donations for hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA using NAT. The division also expanded its line of nucleic acid testing products in Asia Pacific and following validation and testing the diagnostics product Ultrio Plus assay was launched in New Zealand and Hong Kong in October 2009.


Vaccines and Diagnostics Division Products

        The summary and the tables that follow describe key marketed products and potential products in development in our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division. Subject to required regulatory approvals and, in certain instances, contractual limitations, we intend to sell our marketed products throughout the world. However, our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division products are not currently available in every country. Regarding our products in development, these products and indications are in various stages of development throughout the world. For some products, the development process is ahead in the US; for others, development in one or more other countries or regions is ahead of that in the US. Due to the uncertainties associated with the development process, and due to regulatory restrictions in some countries, it may not be possible to obtain regulatory approval for any or all of the new products referred to in this Form 20-F. See "—Regulation" for further information on the approval process.

58


Table of Contents

Key Marketed Vaccine Products

Product
  Indication
Influenza Vaccines    
Agrippal   A purified surface antigen influenza vaccine for adults and children above six months of age
Begrivac   A preservative free influenza vaccine for adults and children above six months of age
Celtura   A (H1N1) cell culture-based influenza vaccine containing the proprietary MF59 adjuvant
Focetria   A (H1N1) containing the proprietary MF59 adjuvant
Fluad   A purified surface antigen influenza vaccine containing the proprietary MF59 adjuvant for the elderly
Fluvirin   A purified surface antigen influenza vaccine for adults and children above four years of age
Fluvirin A (H1N1)   A (H1N1) A purified surface antigen influenza vaccine for adults and children above four years of age
Optaflu   Cell culture-based influenza vaccine for adults above 18 years of age

Meningococcal Vaccines

 

 
Menjugate   Meningococcal C vaccine for children above 2 months of age

Travel Vaccines

 

 
Encepur Children
Encepur Adults
  Tick-borne encephalitis vaccine for children 1-11 years of age and for adults 12+ years of age
Ixiaro   Prophylactic vaccine against Japanese encephalitis virus
Rabipur/Rabavert   Vaccine for rabies, which can be used before or after exposure (typically animal bites)
Pediatric Vaccines    
Polioral   Live, attenuated, oral poliomyelitis vaccine (Sabin) containing attenuated poliomyelitis virus types 1, 2 and 3 from birth
Quinvaxem   Fully-liquid pentavalent vaccine combining antigens for protection against five childhood diseases: diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenzae type b for children above 6 weeks of age

Other Marketed Vaccine Products

        The Vaccines and Diagnostics Division also markets additional products in travel vaccines (e.g., Typhoral L, Havpur), pediatric vaccines (e.g.IPV-Virelon, TD-Virelon, Diftetall, Vaxem-Hib) and adult vaccines (e.g.Tetanol, Td-Virelon).

59


Table of Contents

Vaccine Key Products in Development

Therapeutic Area
  Project/Compound   Potential Indication/Disease Area   Planned filing dates/
Current phase
Influenza   Optaflu   Cell culture-based trivalent seasonal influenza vaccine   EU registered; US 2009 Filed
    Fluad pediatric   A purified surface antigen influenza vaccine containing the proprietary MF59 adjuvant in development for children 6-36 months of age   Phase III
    Aflunov   A (H5N1) influenza vaccine to be used before a pandemic occurs   EU submitted; US Phase II
Meningitis   Menveo   Quadrivalent meningitis vaccine for strains A, C, Y and W-135 for infants, adolescents and adults   Submitted (adolescents & adults) (US & EU) EU 2010/US 2011/Phase III (infants)
    MenB   Monovalent meningitis vaccine for strain B for infants, adolescents and adults   EU 2010/Phase III
P aeruginosa       Prophylactic vaccine for P aeruginosa infections(1)   Phase II
HCV(1)       Therapeutic Hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine   Phase I
        Prophylactic HCV vaccine   Phase I
HIV(1)       Prophylactic HIV vaccine   Phase I
GBS       Prophylactic Group B Streptococcus (GBS) vaccine   Phase I
H pylori       Prophylactic vaccine for H pylori   Phase I
CMV(2)       Prophylactic vaccine for cytomegalovirus   Phase I

(1)
In collaboration with Intercell.

(2)
In collaboration with AlphaVax.

60


Table of Contents

Key Marketed Diagnostics Products

Product
  Product Description
Procleix eSAS System   Semi automated modular instrument solution supporting Duplex and Ultrio NAT assays

Procleix TIGRIS System

 

Fully automated instrument solution supporting Ultrio NAT assays

Procleix Duplex Assay

 

NAT assay designed to detect HIV-1, HCV through a single test

Procleix WNV Assay

 

First NAT assay approved by the FDA to detect West Nile virus.

Procleix Ultrio Assay

 

NAT assay designed to detect HIV-1, HCV and HBV through single testing process

Procleix Ultrio + Assay

 

NAT assay designed to detect HIV-1, HCV and HBV through single testing process with a higher sensitive to HBV

Diagnostic Products in Development

Therapeutic Area
  Product   Product Description   Planned filing dates/
Current phase
Blood Testing   Parvo test   NAT test designed to detect the Parvo B19 virus   Discovery
    Dengue test   NAT test designed to detect the Dengue virus   Discovery
Clinical Diagnostics   Mis-folded protein assay   Novel technology to detect abnormal protein particles that cause several neurodegenerative diseases such as Diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's in patients   Discovery
Molecular Diagnostics   Novachip   Multi-analyte detection proprietary platform which enables the diagnostics of complex diseases by providing multi- parameter array technology and multiple-analyte applications   Pre-clinical
    CRM   Markers for diagnostic and early detection of allograft rejection and dysfunction based on gene expression profiling   Pre-clinical
    ACZ   Molecular test that can predict Rheumatoid Arthritis patients' response to Novartis' ACZ885   Pre-clinical

61


Table of Contents


Principal Markets

        The principal markets for our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division include the US and Europe. The following table sets forth the aggregate 2009 net sales of the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division by region:

Vaccines and Diagnostics
  2009 Net sales to
third parties
 
 
  ($ millions)
  (%)
 

United States

    973     40  

Americas (except the United States)

    65     3  

Europe

    1,083     45  

Rest of the World

    303     12  
           

Total

    2,424     100  
           

        Sales of certain vaccines, including influenza and tick borne encephalitis vaccines, are subject to seasonal variation. Sales of the majority of our other products are not subject to material changes in seasonal demand.


Research and Development

        In 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division invested $508 million in research and development, which amounted to 21% of the division's net sales. The Vaccines and Diagnostics Division invested $360 million and $295 million in research and development in 2008 and 2007 respectively.

        While research and development costs for vaccines traditionally have not been as high as for pharmaceuticals, a robust clinical program including Phase I to Phase III must be performed by the manufacturer to obtain a license for commercialization. See "—Pharmaceuticals—Compounds in Development" and "—Pharmaceuticals—Research and Development." Similarly, our diagnostics research and development efforts, which we perform in collaboration with Gen-Probe, Inc., require extensive and expensive research and testing of potential products. At each of these steps, there is a substantial risk that we will not achieve our goals. In such an event, we may be required to abandon a product in which we have made a substantial investment.


Production

        We manufacture our vaccines products at five facilities in Europe, the US and Asia. Our principal production facilities are located in Liverpool, UK; Marburg, Germany; Siena and Rosia, Italy, and Ankleshwar, India, and the newly-opened site at Holly Springs, North Carolina. We continue to invest and upgrade our existing sites to ensure that previously-initiated remediation efforts are completed and meet quality standards. In addition, certain conjugation and chemistry activities for vaccines are performed at our Emeryville, California site. Our diagnostics products are manufactured for us by Gen-Probe, Inc., an outside supplier. The manufacture of our products is heavily regulated which means that supply can never be an absolute certainty. If we or our suppliers fail to comply fully with such regulations then there could be a product recall or government-enforced shutdown of production facilities which in turn could lead to product shortages.

        Raw materials for the manufacturing process are either produced in-house or purchased from a number of third party suppliers. The raw materials we purchase are generally subject to market price fluctuations. We seek to avoid these fluctuations, where possible, through the use of long-term supply

62


Table of Contents


contracts. We monitor market developments that could have an adverse effect on the supply of essential materials. All raw materials we purchase must comply with our quality standards.

        Each year new seasonal influenza vaccines need to be produced in order to confer effective protection against the current circulating strains of the virus, which can change from year to year. Global surveillance of influenza viruses is conducted throughout the year by the World Health Organization (WHO) Influenza Surveillance Network, which provides us with information on currently circulating strains and identifies the appropriate strains to be included in next season's influenza vaccine. Each year, the European Medicines Agency and the US Centers for Disease Control then confirm the vaccine composition for the coming season for the northern hemisphere and the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration for the southern hemisphere. There can be no guarantee that the division will succeed in producing and having approved an updated flu vaccine within the timeframes necessary to commercialize the vaccine for the applicable flu season.


Marketing and Sales

        Our main Vaccines marketing and sales organizations are based in Germany, UK, Italy and the US. We are also expanding operations in China—where we have agreed to acquire an 85% stake in the Chinese vaccines company Zhejiang Tianyuan Bio-Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.—as well as in India and in various other European and Latin American countries. In the US, we market influenza and rabies vaccines through a network of wholesalers and distributors as well as direct to key customers. Direct sales efforts are focused on public health and distributor channels, and on non-traditional channels, such as employers, chain drug headquarters and service providers.

        The Diagnostics marketing and sales efforts are focused exclusively on blood banks. With roughly half of worldwide blood donations not being subjected to updated viral nucleic acid screening, the company will focus on increasing the practice of viral nucleic acid screening using its proprietary systems in emerging areas of the world.


Competition

        The global market for products of the type sold by our Vaccines and Diagnostics Division is highly competitive, and we compete against other major international corporations with substantial financial and other resources. Competition within the industry is intense and extends across a wide range of commercial activities, including pricing, product characteristics, customer service, sales and marketing, and research and development.

        There is no guarantee that any product, even with patent protection, will remain successful if another company develops a new product offering significant improvements over existing products.


Regulation

        Our vaccines products are subject to essentially the same regulatory procedures as are the products of our Pharmaceuticals Division. See "Pharmaceuticals—Regulation." In the US, a company seeking approval of a vaccine submits a Biologics License Application (BLA) for the vaccine, rather than an NDA. Subsequently, the BLA follows substantially the same path for approval as does an NDA. In addition, new registrations for seasonal flu vaccines must be validated and submitted every year, based on the influenza strains provided by WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention needed for the growth of the vaccine.

        Diagnostics products are regulated as medical devices in the US and the EU. These jurisdictions each have risk-based classification systems that determine the type of information which must be provided to the local regulators in order to obtain the right to market a product. In the US, safety and effectiveness information for Class II and III devices must be reviewed by the FDA. There are two review procedures: a Pre-Market Approval (PMA) and a Pre-Market Notification (510(k)) submission. Under a PMA, the

63


Table of Contents


manufacturer must submit to the FDA supporting evidence sufficient to prove the safety and effectiveness of the device. The FDA has 180 days to review a PMA. Under Pre-Market Notification (510(k)), the manufacturer submits notification to the FDA that it intends to commence marketing the product, with data that establishes the product as substantially equivalent to another product already on the market. The FDA has 90 days to review and clear a 510(k) submission. For specific diagnostics products that are sold into blood banks, or sold for diagnosis of HIV-1 infection, applications are submitted for review by the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER). Under such review, the product is considered a biologic until such time as approval is received, at which time the product becomes a medical device. For products used specifically for screening of blood donors, or biologic reagents sold for further manufacturing use, the medical device is subject to Licensure by CBER. The submission for this purpose follows the same requirements as Vaccines; a Biologic License Application is submitted to CBER. CBER has 240 days to review a BLA.

        In the EU, the CE marking is required for all medical devices sold. By affixing the CE marking, the manufacturer certifies that a product is in compliance with provisions of the EU's Medical Device Directive. Diagnostics products are specifically covered by the EU In Vitro Diagnostic (IVD) Directive. Under that Directive, certain products are subject to review and prior approval by a "notified body." Others are subject to a self-certification process by the manufacturer, which requires the manufacturer to confirm that the product performs to appropriate standards. This allows the manufacturer to issue a Declaration of Conformity and to notify competent authorities in the EU that the manufacturer intends to market the product. In order to comply with European regulations, our Vaccines & Diagnostics Division maintains a full Quality Assurance system and is subject to routine auditing by a certified third party (a "notified body") to ensure that this quality system is in compliance with the requirements of the EU's Medical Device Directive as well as the requirements of the ISO quality systems' standard ISO 13485.


Intellectual Property

        We attach great importance to patents, trademarks, and know-how in order to protect our investment in research and development, manufacturing and marketing. It is our policy to seek the broadest possible protection for significant product developments in all major markets. Among other things, patents may cover the products themselves, including the product's active substance and its formulation. Patents may also cover the processes for manufacturing a product, including processes for manufacturing intermediate substances used in the manufacture of the products. Patents may also cover particular uses of a product, such as its use to treat a particular disease, or its dosage regimen.

        The protection offered by such patents extends for varying periods depending on the legal life of patents in the various countries. The protection afforded, which may also vary from country to country, depends upon the type of patent and its scope of coverage. We monitor our competitors and vigorously challenge infringements of our intellectual property.


SANDOZ

        Our Sandoz Division is a world leader in developing, manufacturing and marketing generic pharmaceutical products, follow-on biopharmaceutical products and drug substances that are not protected by valid and enforceable third-party patents. As of December 31, 2009, affiliates of the Sandoz Division employed 23,423 full-time equivalents associates worldwide in more than 130 countries. In 2009, our Sandoz Division achieved consolidated net sales of $ 7.5 billion, 17% of the Group's total net sales.

        The Sandoz Division is active in Retail Generics, Anti-Infectives, Biopharmaceuticals and Oncology Injectables (following the acquisition of EBEWE Pharma which was completed in September 2009). In Retail Generics, we develop and manufacture active ingredients and finished dosage forms of pharmaceuticals, as well as supplying active ingredients to third parties. In Anti-Infectives, we develop and manufacture active pharmaceutical ingredients and intermediates—mainly antibiotics—for use by Retail Generics and for sale to third-party customers. In Biopharmaceuticals, we develop and manufacture

64


Table of Contents


protein- or other biotechnology-based products (known as biosimilars or follow-on biologics) and sell biotech manufacturing services to other companies. In Oncology Injectables, we develop and manufacture cytotoxic products for the hospital market.

        The worldwide market for generic pharmaceutical products has been growing by about 10% annually and is expected by industry analysts to continue at nearly that rate through 2013, fueled primarily by the growing health needs of an aging population, opportunities created through patent expiries, increasing access to healthcare and pressures to contain healthcare costs. According to IMS Health, Sandoz is the No. 2 company in worldwide generic sales and is positioned as a global leader in Retail Generics. Sandoz Biopharmaceuticals has emerged as the leading global player in biosimilars, with three marketed medicines, and a pipeline of two dozen projects at various stages of development. In addition, Sandoz remains one of the leading manufacturers of antibiotics worldwide. The acquisition of EBEWE Pharma positions Sandoz among the top four global players in oncology injectables, according to IMS Health.

        Sandoz has three strategic priorities: to be first-to-market with our products as originators' patents expire or become unenforceable, to be cost competitive by leveraging our economies of scale in development and production, and to differentiate Sandoz based on our extensive global reach and our advanced technical expertise in the development and manufacturing of difficult-to-make generics and biosimilars.

        In 2009, despite continued delays on some key product launches, particularly in the US, Retail Generics benefited from key launches including the first-to-market US launch of tacrolimus (Prograf®); and the launches in various European countries of pantoprazole (marketed in the US as Protonix®), clopidogrel (Plavix®), and esomeprazole (Nexium®). Anti-Infectives experienced continued volume growth, with key products globally including amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, ceftriaxone, azithromycin and cefdinir. In Biopharmaceuticals, Sandoz continued to roll out important follow-on products and to expand contract manufacturing. Following the launch in the EU of recombinant growth hormone Omnitrope and anemia medicine Binocrit, in 2006 and 2007 respectively, oncology medicine Zarzio/Filgrastim Hexal was launched in several EU countries in 2009. Meanwhile, Omnitrope, the first follow-on biologic to be approved and launched in both the US and the EU, was also introduced in Japan and Canada, the first-ever biosimilar in both of these markets.

        In May 2009, Novartis announced it would acquire EBEWE Pharma, an Austrian-based company specializing in oncology injectables with more than 15 marketed products and a strong pipeline with several planned near-term launches, for EUR 925 million. We completed this acquisition in September 2009, and began integration activities immediately with the creation of a Sandoz global center of excellence in oncology injectables.


Recently Launched Products

        Sandoz launched a number of important products in 2009, including:

65


Table of Contents


Key Marketed Products

        The following tables describe key marketed products for Sandoz (availability varies by market):

Retail Generics

Product
  Originator Drug   Description
Acetylcysteine   Fluimucil®   Respiratory System
Amlodipine   Norvasc®   Hypertension
Amlodipine/Benazepril   Lotrel®   Hypertension
Amoxicillin   Amoxil®   Anti-infective
Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid   Augmentin®   Anti-infective
Fentanyl   Duragesic®   Analgesic
Metoprolol   Lopressor®   Anti-hypertension
Omeprazole   Prilosec®   Ulcer and heartburn treatment
Simvastatin   Zocor®   Cholesterol lowering treatment
Tacrolimus   Prograf®   Transplantation

66


Table of Contents

Anti-Infectives

Active Ingredients
  Description

Oral and sterile penicillins

  Anti-infectives

Oral and sterile cefalosporins

  Anti-infectives

Clavulanic acid and mixtures with clavulanic acid

  ß-lactam inhibitors

Classical and semisynthetic erythromycins

  Anti-infectives

Tiamuline

  Anti-infectives

Lovastatin, Simvastatin, Pravastatin

  Statins

Vancomycin

  Anti-infectives

Thyroxine

  Hormones

 

Intermediates
  Description

Various cephalosporin intermediates

  Anti-infectives

Erythromycin base

  Anti-infectives

Various crude compounds produced by fermentation

  Cyclosporine, ascomysine, rapamycine, mycophenolic acid, etc.

Biopharmaceuticals

Product
  Originator Drug   Description
Omnitrope   Somatropin®   Recombinant human growth hormone
Binocrit and Epoetin alfa Hexal   Eprex®/Erypo®   Recombinant protein used for anemia
Zarzio and Filgrastim Hexal   Neupogen®   Recombinant protein used in oncology

Oncology Injectables

Product
  Originator Drug   Description
Carboplatin   Paraplatin®   Ovarian, lung, head-neck and cervix cancer
Epirubicin   Farmorubicin®   Breast, lung, ovarian, gastric and bladder cancer, and others
Gemcitabine   Gemzar®   Bladder, pancreas, lung, ovarian, and breast cancer
Methotrexate   Folex®, Rheumatrex®   Arthritis; breast, lung, cervix and ovarian cancer, and others
Oxaliplatin   Eloxatin®   Colorectal and colon cancer
Paclitaxel   Taxol®   Breast, lung and ovarian cancer, Kaposi sarcoma

67


Table of Contents


Principal Markets

        The two largest generics markets in the world—the US and Europe—are the principal markets for Sandoz, although we are active in more than 130 countries. This table sets forth aggregate 2009 net sales by region:

Sandoz
  2009 Net Sales to
third parties
 
 
  ($ millions)
  (%)
 

United States

    1,847     25  

Americas (except the United States)

    555     7  

Europe

    4,271     57  

Rest of the World

    820     11  
           

Total

    7,493     100  
           

        Many Sandoz products are used for chronic conditions that require patients to consume the product over long periods of time, from months to years. Sales of our anti-infective products are subject to seasonal variation. Sales of the vast majority of our other products are not subject to material changes in seasonal demand.


Production

        We manufacture our Sandoz products at 39 production facilities around the world. Among these, our principal production facilities are located in Barleben, Germany; Kundl and Unterach, Austria; Menges and Ljubljana, Slovenia; Broomfield, Colorado; Wilson, North Carolina; Stryków, Poland; Kalwe and Mahad, India; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Boucherville, Canada; Cambé and Taboão, Brazil; Gebze and Syntex, Turkey. In 2007, we restructured our worldwide production network with the sale of our facility in Hvidovre, Denmark, and the acquisition of production sites in Gebze, Turkey, Zhongshan, China, and Jakarta, Indonesia. Although no longer part of our production capacity, we intend to retain a close relationship with the Radebeul, Germany site, which will remain one of our key suppliers.

        Active pharmaceutical ingredients are manufactured in our own facilities or purchased from third-party suppliers. We maintain state-of-the-art and cost-competitive processes within our own production network. Those processes include fermentation, chemical syntheses and precipitation processes, such as sterile processing. Many follow-on biologics are manufactured using recombinant DNA derived technology by which a gene is introduced into a host cell, which then produces the human protein. This manufacturing process requires sophisticated technical expertise. We are constantly working to improve current and to develop new manufacturing processes.

        Where possible, our policy is to maintain multiple supply sources so that the business is not dependent on a single or limited number of suppliers, and competitive material sourcing can be assured. However, our ability to do so may at times be limited by regulatory or other requirements. We monitor market developments that could have an adverse effect on the supply of essential active pharmaceutical ingredients. All active pharmaceutical ingredients we purchase must comply with high quality standards.

        We obtain agricultural raw materials from multiple suppliers based in the EU. We obtain chemicals and other raw materials from suppliers around the world. The raw materials we purchase are generally subject to market price fluctuations. We seek to avoid these fluctuations, where possible, through the use of long-term supply contracts. We also proactively monitor markets and developments that could have an adverse effect on the supply of essential materials. All raw materials we purchase must comply with our quality standards.

68


Table of Contents

        The goal of our supply chain strategy is to produce and distribute high quality products efficiently. The manufacture of our products is heavily regulated, making supply never an absolute certainty. If we, or our third party suppliers, fail to comply fully with such regulations, then there could be product recalls or a government-enforced shutdown of production facilities, which in turn could lead to product shortages. We have experienced supply interruptions in the past and there can be no assurance that supply will not be interrupted again in the future as a result of unforeseen circumstances. For example, in August 2008, our Wilson, North Carolina facility received a Warning Letter from the FDA that raised concerns regarding the Wilson facility's compliance with FDA Good Manufacturing Practice regulations, and stated that until the FDA confirms that the deficiencies have been corrected, the FDA could recommend disapproval of any pending NDAs, abbreviated NDAs or export certificate requests submitted by our Sandoz US affiliate. This Warning Letter was resolved in August 2009 following a successful FDA inspection.


Marketing and Sales

        The Retail Generics business of Sandoz sells a broad portfolio of generic pharmaceutical products to wholesalers, pharmacies, hospitals and other healthcare outlets. Sandoz adapts its marketing and sales approach to local decision making processes, depending on the structure of the market in each country.

        In response to rising healthcare costs, many governments and private medical care providers, such as health maintenance organizations, have instituted reimbursement schemes that favor the substitution of generic products for bioequivalent branded pharmaceutical products. In the US, statutes have been enacted by virtually all states that permit or require pharmacists to substitute a less expensive generic product for the brand-name version of a drug that has been prescribed to a patient. Generic use is growing in Europe, but penetration rates in many EU countries are below those in the US because reimbursement practices do not create efficient incentives for substitution. Legislative or regulatory changes can have a significant impact on our business in a country. In Germany, for example, the generic market is in transition as healthcare reforms increasingly shift decision making from physicians to insurance funds.

        Our Anti-Infectives business supplies Retail Generics and the pharmaceutical industry worldwide with active pharmaceutical ingredients and intermediates, mainly in the field of antibiotics.

        Our Biopharmaceuticals business operates in an emerging business environment. Regulatory pathways for approving follow-on biologics are either new or still in development, and policies have not yet been defined for substitution and reimbursement of biosimilars in many markets, including the US.

        Our Oncology Injectables business supplies hospitals worldwide with cytotoxic products for use in oncology treatment.


Competition

        The market for generic products is characterized by increasing demand for high-quality pharmaceuticals that can be produced at lower costs due to a comparatively minimal initial research and development investments. Increasing pressure on healthcare expenditures and numerous patent and data exclusivity period expirations have created a favorable market environment for the generics industry. This positive market trend, however, brings increased competition among the companies selling generic pharmaceutical products, leading to ongoing price pressure on generic pharmaceuticals.

        In addition, research-based pharmaceutical companies have responded to increased competition from generic products by licensing their branded products to generic companies (the so-called "authorized generic"). By doing so, research-based pharmaceutical companies participate in the conversion of their branded product once generic conversion begins. Consequently, generic companies that were not in a position to compete on a specific product are allowed to enter the generic market using the innovator's product. In the US, the authorized generic is not subject to the US Hatch-Waxman Act rules regarding exclusivity (See "—Regulation"). The company that launches an authorized generic typically enters the market at the same time as the generic exclusivity holder. This tends to reduce the value of the exclusivity

69


Table of Contents


for the company that invested in creating the first generic. Furthermore, certain research-based companies continually seek new ways to protect their market franchise and to decrease the impact of generic competition. For example, some research-based pharmaceutical companies have recently reacted to generic competition by decreasing the prices of their branded product, thus seeking to limit the profit that the generic companies can earn on the competing generic product.


Development and Registration

        Before a generic pharmaceutical may be marketed, intensive technical and clinical development work must be performed to demonstrate in bio-availability studies the bio-equivalency of the generic product to the reference product. Nevertheless, research and development costs associated with generic pharmaceuticals are much lower than those of the established counterparts, as no clinical trials on dose finding and efficacy must be performed by the generic company. As a result, pharmaceutical products for which the patent and data exclusivity period has expired can be offered for sale at prices much lower than those of products protected by patents and data exclusivity, which must recoup substantial basic research and development costs through higher prices over the life of the product's patent and data exclusivity period.

        For follow-on biologic products, the regulatory pathways for approving such products are still in development in many countries. However, at least for certain biopharmaceutical products, at least some clinical trials in patients to determine safety and efficacy do appear to be required. Nonetheless, Sandoz has successfully registered and launched the first biosimilar product in Europe, the US and Japan, as well as two further products in Europe.

        Currently, the affiliates of the Sandoz Division employ more than 1,300 Development and Registration staff who explore alternative routes for the manufacture of known compounds and develop innovative dosage forms of well-established medicines. These associates are based worldwide, including major facilities in Holzkirchen and Rudolstadt, Germany; Kundl, Schaftenau and Unterach, Austria; Menges and Ljubljana, Slovenia; Kolshet, India; Boucherville, Canada; Broomfield, Colorado and East Hanover, New Jersey (transferred from Wilson, NC); Cambé, Brazil and Buenos Aires, Argentina.

        In 2008, Sandoz invested $613 million in product development, which amounted to 8.2% of the division's net sales. Our Sandoz Division invested $667 million and $563 million in product development in 2008 and 2007 respectively.


Regulation

        The Hatch-Waxman Act in the US (and similar legislation in the EU and in other countries) eliminated the requirement that generic pharmaceutical manufacturers repeat the extensive clinical trials required for originator products, so long as the generic version could be shown in bioavailability studies to be of identical quality and purity, and to be biologically equivalent to the reference product.

        In the US, the decision whether a generic pharmaceutical is bioequivalent to the original branded product is made by the FDA based on an Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) filed by the generic product's manufacturer. The process typically takes approximately eighteen months from the filing of the ANDA until FDA approval. However, delays can occur if issues arise regarding the interpretation of bioequivalence study data, labeling requirements for the generic product, or qualifying the supply of active ingredients. In addition, the Hatch-Waxman Act requires a generic manufacturer to certify in certain situations that the generic product does not infringe on any current applicable patents on the product held by the innovator, or to certify that such patents are invalid or the product is non-infringing. This certification often results in a patent infringement lawsuit being brought by the patent holder against the generic company. In the event of such a lawsuit, the Hatch-Waxman Act imposes an automatic 30-month delay in the approval of the generic product in order to allow the parties to resolve the intellectual property issues. For generic applicants who are the first to file their ANDA containing a certification claiming non-infringement or patent invalidity, the Hatch-Waxman Act provides those

70


Table of Contents


applicants with 180 days of marketing exclusivity to recoup the expense of challenging the innovator patents. However, generic applicants must launch their products within certain time frames or risk losing the marketing exclusivity that they had gained through being a first-to-file applicant.

        In the EU, decisions on the granting of a marketing authorization are made either by the EMEA under the Centralized Procedure, or by a single Member State under the national or decentralized procedure. See "—Pharmaceuticals—Regulation—European Union." Companies may submit Abridged Applications for approval of a generic medicinal product based upon its "essential similarity" to a medicinal product authorized and marketed in the EU following the expiration of the product's data exclusivity period. In such cases, the generic company is able to submit its Abridged Application based on the data submitted by the medicine's innovator, without the need to conduct extensive Phase III clinical trials of its own. For all products that received a marketing authorization in the EU after late 2005, the Abridged Application can be submitted throughout the EU. However, the data submitted by the innovator in support of its application for a marketing authorization for the reference product will be protected for ten years after the first grant of marketing authorization in all Member States, and can be extended for an additional year if a further innovative indication has been authorized for that product, based on pre-clinical and clinical trials filed by the innovator that show a significant clinical benefit in comparison to the existing therapies.


Intellectual Property

        Wherever possible, our generic products are protected by our own patents. Among other things, patents may cover the products themselves, including the product's active substance and its formulation. Patents may also cover the processes for manufacturing a product, including processes for manufacturing intermediate substances used in the manufacture of the products. Patents also may cover particular uses of a product, such as its use to treat a particular disease or its dosage regimen. It is our policy to seek the broadest possible protection for significant product developments in all major markets.

        We take all reasonable steps to ensure that our generic products do not infringe valid intellectual property rights held by others. Nevertheless, originating companies commonly assert patent and other intellectual property rights in an effort to delay or prevent the launch of competing generic products. As a result, we can become involved in significant litigation regarding our generic products. If we are unsuccessful in defending these suits, we could be subject to injunctions preventing us from selling our generic products, or to damages, which may be substantial.


CONSUMER HEALTH

        Our Consumer Health Division is a world leader in the research, development, manufacturing and marketing of a wide range of competitively differentiated products that restore, maintain or improve the health and well-being of consumers, as well as pets and livestock. The business of Consumer Health is conducted by a number of affiliated companies throughout the world. Created in January 2002, the Consumer Health Division's continuing operations consist of the following three business units:

        Each business unit has its own research, development, manufacturing, distribution and selling capabilities. However, none are material enough to the Group to be separately disclosed as a segment. As of December 31, 2009, the affiliates of our Consumer Health Division continuing operations employed 12,539 full-time equivalent associates worldwide. In 2009, the affiliates of our Consumer Health Division achieved consolidated net sales from continuing operations of $5.8 billion, which represented 13% of the Group's total net sales from continuing operations.

71


Table of Contents

        Our Consumer Health Division places considerable emphasis on the development of strong, consumer-oriented and trustworthy brands. To deliver accelerated sales growth and to achieve leadership positions in the fields in which we compete, our Consumer Health Division seeks to give voice to the consumer and to determine the needs and desires of consumers.

        In the dynamic world of consumer healthcare, consumers are becoming more knowledgeable about health and the benefits of self-medication. The success of each business unit depends upon its ability to anticipate and meet the needs of consumers and health professionals worldwide.

        The Medical Nutrition and Gerber Business Units were previously included in the Consumer Health Division, but have been classified as discontinued operations in all periods in the Group's consolidated financial statements, as a consequence of the divestment of these business units. On September 1, 2007, we completed the sale of the Gerber Business Unit to Nestlé S.A., Switzerland for $5.5 billion. On July 1, 2007, we completed the sale of the remainder of the Medical Nutrition Business Unit to Nestlé S.A., Switzerland for $2.5 billion.

        The following is a description of the three Consumer Health Division Business Units:

72


Table of Contents


Principal Markets

        The principal markets for the Consumer Health Division are the US and Europe. The following table sets forth the aggregate 2009 net sales of the Consumer Health Division by region:

Consumer Health
  2009 Net sales to
third parties
 
 
  ($ millions)
  (%)
 
United States     1,892     33  
Americas (except the United States)     496     8  
Europe     2,541     44  
Rest of the World     883     15  
           
Total net sales     5,812     100  
           

        Sales of our OTC Business Unit are marked by a high degree of seasonality, with our cough, cold and allergy brands significantly affected by the timing and severity of the annual cold and flu and allergy seasons. Sales of our Animal Health Business Unit's livestock segment can also fluctuate seasonally, and can be significantly affected by climatic and economic conditions, or by changing health or reproduction rates of animal populations. Sales of most of our other products are not subject to material changes in seasonal demand.


Production

        OTC: Products for our OTC Business Unit are produced by the business unit's own plants, strategic third-party suppliers and other Novartis Group plants (which are predominantly owned and operated by the Pharmaceuticals Division). The primary OTC plants are located in Lincoln, Nebraska; Nyon, Switzerland, Humacao, Puerto Rico, and Jamshoro, Pakistan.

        Animal Health: Approximately 80% of our production volume is manufactured by third parties and Novartis affiliates in other divisions or business units. Animal Health has production facilities of its own located around the world, with main sites in Wusi Farm, China; Dundee and Braintree, UK; Larchwood, Iowa; Charlottetown, Canada; and Huningue, France.

        CIBA Vision: CIBA Vision has major production facilities in Batam, Indonesia; Duluth, Georgia; Des Plaines, Illinois; Grosswallstadt, Germany; Cidra, Puerto Rico; Singapore; Johor, Malaysia; and Mississauga, Canada. In 2008 and 2009, CIBA Vision significantly streamlined its production processes, resulting in consistently high fulfillment rates.

        While production practices may vary from business unit to business unit, we generally obtain our raw materials from sources around the world. We obtain raw materials, intermediates and active ingredients from suppliers around the world. The raw materials, intermediates and active ingredients we purchase are generally subject to market price fluctuations. We seek to avoid these fluctuations, where possible, through the use of long-term supply contracts. We also proactively monitor markets and developments that could have an adverse effect on the supply of essential materials. All raw materials we purchase must comply with our quality standards.

        The goal of our supply chain strategy is to produce and distribute high quality products efficiently. The manufacture of our products is heavily regulated, making supply never an absolute certainty. If we, or

73


Table of Contents


our third party suppliers, fail to comply fully with such regulations, then there could be product recalls or a government-enforced shutdown of production facilities, which in turn could lead to product shortages. CIBA Vision has experienced significant supply interruptions in the past and there can be no assurance that CIBA Vision's supply—or the supply of OTC or Animal Health—will not be interrupted again in the future as a result of unforeseen circumstances.


Marketing and Sales

        OTC: OTC aims to be a leading global participant in fulfilling the needs of patients and consumers for self-medication healthcare. Strong, leading brands and products, innovation led by a worldwide research and development organization, and in-house marketing and sales organizations are key strengths in pursuing this objective. We engage in general public relations activities, including media advertisements, brand websites and other direct advertisements of brands, to the extent permitted by law in each country. We distribute our products through various channels such as pharmacies, food, drug and mass retail outlets.

        Animal Health: Animal Health's products are mostly prescription-only treatments for both farm and companion animals. The major distribution channel is veterinarians, either directly or through wholesalers of veterinary products. Primary marketing efforts are targeted at veterinarians using such marketing tools as targeted personal selling, printed materials, direct mail, advertisements, articles in the veterinary specialty press, and conferences and educational events for veterinarians. In addition, we engage in general public relations activities and media advertising, including brand websites and other direct advertisements of brands, to the extent permitted by law in each country.

        CIBA Vision: In most countries, contact lenses are available only by prescription. CIBA Vision lenses can be purchased from eye care professionals, optical chains and large retailers, subject to country regulation. CIBA Vision's lens care products can be found in major drug, food, mass merchandising and optical retail chains in the US, Europe, Japan and elsewhere, subject to country regulations. In addition, mail order and Internet sales of contact lenses are becoming increasingly important channels in major markets worldwide.


Competition

        The global market for products of the type sold by our Consumer Health Division is highly competitive, and we compete against other major international corporations with substantial financial and other resources. Competition within the industry is intense and extends across a wide range of commercial activities, including pricing, product characteristics, customer service, sales and marketing, and research and development. Particularly in the US, our branded OTC products compete against "store brand" products that are made with the same active ingredients as ours. These products do not carry our trusted brand names, but they also do not carry the burden of the expensive advertising and marketing which helped to establish a demand for the product. As a result, the store brands may be sold at lower prices. In recent years, consumers have increasingly begun to purchase store brand OTC products instead of branded products.


Research and Development

        OTC: In OTC, the focus of research and development activities is primarily on dermatology, analgesics, cough/cold/respiratory, gastrointestinal, and cardiovascular risk reduction (through smoking cessation programs). OTC also works closely with the Pharmaceuticals Division to evaluate appropriate products that can be switched from prescription to OTC status. The development of line extensions to leverage brand equities is also of high importance. These extensions can take many forms including new flavors, new galenical forms and more consumer-friendly packaging.

74


Table of Contents

        Animal Health: Novartis Animal Health has dedicated research and development facilities in Switzerland, North America and Australia. The main focus for research is identification of potential new parasiticides and therapeutics in key areas of internal medicine. In addition, in the US and Canada, we devote resources to the quest for new vaccines for farm animals and cultivated fish. Also, our researchers exploit synergy with other Novartis businesses and collaborate with external partners to develop veterinary therapeutics and vaccines. Drug delivery projects, some in collaboration with external partners, concentrate on key treatment areas and aim to improve efficacy and ease of use.

        CIBA Vision: CIBA Vision invests substantially in internal research and development operations, which yield new chemistries, lens designs and surfaces, and processing technologies. These resources are complemented by licensing agreements and joint research and development partnerships with third parties. For contact lenses our key focus is in two areas: daily disposable lenses and silicone hydrogel lenses. In lens care, our development efforts focus on lens care solutions that complement silicone hydrogel contact lenses, and provide the safety, disinfecting and cleaning power needed to help maintain ocular health.

        In 2009, the Consumer Health Division continuing operations invested $346 million in research and development, which amounted to 6.0% of the division's net sales. Our Consumer Health Division invested $313 million and $301 million in research and development in 2008 and 2007 respectively.


Regulation

        OTC: For OTC products, the primary regulatory process for bringing a product to market consists of preparing and filing a detailed dossier with the appropriate national or international registration authority and obtaining approval of the applicable health authority. See "—Pharmaceuticals—Regulation." In the US, in addition to the NDA process, which also is used to approve prescription pharmaceutical products, an OTC product may be sold if the FDA has determined that the product's active ingredient is generally recognized as safe and effective. FDA makes this determination through a regulatory process known as the OTC Review. In the OTC Review, the FDA has established, in a series of monographs, the conditions under which particular active ingredients may be recognized as safe and effective for OTC use. Pharmaceutical companies can market products containing these active ingredients without the necessity of filing an NDA and going through its formal approval process, so long as the company complies with the terms of the published monograph. These processes do not apply outside the US. Outside the US, countries have their own regulatory processes for approving or allowing the sale of pharmaceutical products, including prescription, OTC, and switching from prescription to OTC status. These processes vary from country to country.

        Animal Health: The registration procedures for animal medicines are similar to those for human medicines. An animal drug application for product registration must be accompanied by extensive data on target animal and user safety, environmental fate and toxicology, efficacy in laboratory and clinical studies, information on manufacturing, quality control and labeling as well as on residues and food safety if applied to food-producing animals. In the US, animal health products are generally regulated by the FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine. Certain product categories are regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and vaccines are under the control of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). In the EU, veterinary medicinal products need marketing authorization from the competent authority of a member-state (national authorization) or from the EU Commission (community authorization) following either the Centralized Procedure, Mutual Recognition Procedure or the Decentralized Procedure. See "—Pharmaceuticals—Regulation."

        CIBA Vision: Contact lenses and lens care products are regulated as medical devices in the US, the EU and the majority of other regulated countries. In the US, extended wear contact lenses are considered Class III devices, for which a PMA application is submitted to FDA. Daily wear lenses and lens care products are considered Class II devices for which the manufacturer must submit a Premarket Notification 510(k) application. See "—Vaccines & Diagnostics—Regulation."

75


Table of Contents


Intellectual Property

        Our Consumer Health businesses are strongly brand-oriented. As a result, we consider our trademarks to be of utmost value. Enforceable trademarks protect most of our brands in the majority of the markets where these brands are sold, and we vigorously protect these trademarks from infringement. Our most important trademarks are used in a number of countries. Local variations of these international trademarks are employed where legal or linguistic considerations require the use of an alternative.

        Wherever possible our products are protected by patents. Among other things, patents may cover the products themselves, including the product's active substance and its formulation. Patents may also cover the processes for manufacturing a product, including processes for manufacturing intermediate substances used in the manufacture of the products. Patents may also cover particular uses of a product, such as its use to treat a particular disease, or its dosage regimen. It is our policy to seek the broadest possible protection for significant product developments in all major markets.

        Our Consumer Health businesses also sell products which are not currently covered by patents. Some of these products have never been patent-protected and others have lost protection due to patent expiry.

        In addition, see "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 20" for a description of patent litigation involving the CIBA Vision Business Unit of our Consumer Health Division.


4.C Organizational Structure

        See "Item 4. Information on the Company—4.A History and Development of Novartis," and "Item 4. Information on the Company—4.B Business Overview—Overview."


4.D Property, Plants and Equipment

        Our principal executive offices are located in Basel, Switzerland. Our divisions and business units operate through a number of affiliates having offices, research facilities and production sites throughout the world.

        We generally own our facilities. However, a few sites are leased under long-term leases. Some of our principal facilities are subject to mortgages and other security interests granted to secure indebtedness to certain financial institutions. We believe that our production plants and research facilities are well maintained and generally adequate to meet our needs for the foreseeable future.

76


Table of Contents

        The following table sets forth our major production and research facilities.

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Major Production facilities:        
 
Pharmaceuticals        

Ringaskiddy, Ireland

 

532,000

 

Drug substances, intermediates
 
Grimsby, UK   450,000   Drug substances, intermediates
 
Stein, Switzerland   358,000   Steriles, ampules, vials, tablets, capsules, transdermals
 
Basel, Switzerland—Klybeck   235,000   Drug substances, intermediates
 
Basel, Switzerland—Schweizerhalle   230,000   Drug substances, intermediates
 
Basel, Switzerland—St. Johann   53,000   Drug substances, intermediates, biopharmaceutical drug substance
 
Torre, Italy   200,000   Tablets, drug substance intermediates
 
Changshu, China   229,000   Drug substances, intermediates
 
Suffern, NY   61,000   Tablets, capsules, transdermals, vials
 
Kurtkoy, Turkey   51,000   Tablets, capsules, effervescents
 
Horsham, UK   14,000   Tablets, capsules
 
Sasayama, Japan   104,000   Tablets, capsules, dry syrups, suppositories, creams, powders
 
Huningue, France   112,000
(includes Animal Health facilities)
  Suppositories, liquids, solutions, suspensions, biopharmaceutical drug substances
 
Singapore   29,000   Bulk tablets
 
Wehr, Germany   58,000   Tablets, creams, ointments
 
Barbera, Spain   51,000   Tablets, capsules
 
Chang Ping, China   28,000   Tablets, capsules, gel
 

77


Table of Contents

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Vaccines and Diagnostics        

Holly Springs, NC

 

130,000

 

Vaccines and adjuvant
 
Emeryville, CA   99,000
(production and R&D facilities; includes Pharmaceuticals facilities)
  Vaccines and blood testing
 
Siena/Rosia, Italy   97,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Vaccines
 
Liverpool, UK   62,000   Vaccines
 
Marburg, Germany   45,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Vaccines and adjuvant
 
Ankleshwar, India   11,000   Vaccines
 
Sandoz        

Taboão da Serra, Brazil

 

501,000

 

Capsules, tablets, syrups, suspensions, drop solutions
 
Kundl and Schaftenau, Austria   449,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Biotech products, intermediates, active drug substances, final steps (finished pharmaceuticals)
 
Menges, Slovenia   131,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Biotech products and active drug substances
 
Barleben, Germany   95,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Ljubljana, Slovenia   83,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Broomfield, CO   60,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Kalwe, India   47,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Mahad, India   43,000   Active drug substances
 
Gebze, Turkey   42,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Cambé, Brazil   32,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Wilson, NC   31,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 

78


Table of Contents

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Rudolstadt, Germany   37,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Inhalation technology, ophthalmics and nasal products
 
Stryków, Poland   20,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Kolshet, India   20,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Generic pharmaceuticals
 
Boucherville, Canada   14,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Injectable products
 
Holzkirchen, Germany   17,000 (production and R&D facilities)   Oral dispersable films, transdermal delivery systems, reservoir and matrix patches
 
Unterach, Austria   15,000 (production and R&D facilities)   Oncology injectables
 
Consumer Health        
 
OTC

 

 

 

 
 
Lincoln, NE   46,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Tablets, liquids, creams, ointments, capsules, patches
 
Nyon, Switzerland   15,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Liquids and creams
 
Humacao, Puerto Rico   13,000   Tablets, capsules, medicated chocolates, softgels and Thin Strips
 
Jamshoro, Pakistan   24,000   Tablets, liquids, creams
 
  Animal Health        

Wusi Farm, China

 

39,000

 

Insecticides, antibacterials, acaricides, powders
 
Larchwood, IA   13,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Veterinary immunologicals
 
Dundee, UK   11,000   Packaging, formulation of liquids, solids, creams, sterile filling
 
Braintree, UK   6,000   Veterinary immunologicals
 
Huningue, France   5,000   Formulation and packaging of tablets, creams, ointments, suspensions and liquids
 

79


Table of Contents

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Charlottetown, Canada   5,000   Veterinary immunologicals for aquaculture
 
  CIBA Vision        

Johor, Malaysia

 

35,000

 

Contact lenses
 
Duluth, GA   34,000   Contact lenses
 
Pulau Batam, Indonesia   27,000   Contact lenses
 
Des Plaines, IL   27,000   Contact lenses
 
Singapore   19,000   Contact lenses
 
Cidra, Puerto Rico   6,000   Contact lenses
 
Toronto, Canada   15,000   Lens care products
 

Major Research and Development Facilities:

 

 

 

 
 
Pharmaceuticals        

East Hanover, NJ

 

177,000

 

General pharmaceutical products
 
Basel, Switzerland—St. Johann   150,000   General pharmaceutical products
 
Basel, Switzerland—Klybeck   140,000   General pharmaceutical products
 
Cambridge, MA   116,000   General pharmaceutical products
 
Horsham, UK   38,000   Respiratory and nervous system diseases
 
Emeryville, CA   (included in Vaccines and Diagnostics facilities)   Oncology
 
Shanghai, China   5,000   Oncology
 
Vaccines and Diagnostics        

Emeryville, CA

 

99,000
(production and R&D facilities; includes Pharmaceuticals facilities)

 

Vaccines and blood testing
 
Siena/Rosia, Italy   97,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Vaccines
 
Marburg, Germany   45,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Vaccines
 
Cambridge, MA   9,000   Vaccines
 

80


Table of Contents

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Sandoz        

Kundl and Schaftenau, Austria

 

449,000
(production and R&D facilities)

 

Biotech processes, innovations in antibiotic technologies
 
Menges, Slovenia   131,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Biotech products and active drug substances
 
Ljubljana, Slovenia   83,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Broad range of finished dosage forms and new delivery systems
 
East Hanover, NJ   6,000   Broad range of finished dosage forms
 
Rudolstadt, Germany   37,000 (production and R&D facilities)   Generic oral solid formulations and active drug substances
 
Holzkirchen, Germany   17,000 (production and R&D facilities)   Broad range of innovative dosage forms, including implants and transdermal therapeutic systems
 
Boucherville, Canada   14,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Injectable products
 
Kolshet, India   20,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Generic pharmaceuticals
 
Unterach, Austria   15,000 (production and R&D facilities)   Oncology injectables
 
Consumer Health        
 
OTC

 

 

 

 
Lincoln, NE   46,400
(production and R&D facilities)
  Tablets, capsules, liquids, ointments, creams and high potent compounds
 
Nyon, Switzerland   15,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Over-the-counter medicine products
 
Thane, India   2,000
(R&D facilities)
  Tablets, capsules, powders, creams, ointments, oral liquids
 
  Animal Health        

St. Aubin, Switzerland

 

26,000

 

Parasiticides, therapeutics for companion and farm animals
 
Larchwood, IA   13,000
(production and R&D facilities)
  Veterinary immunologicals
 

81


Table of Contents

Location/Division or Business Unit
  Size of Site (in square meters)
  Major Activity
 
Yarrandoo, Australia   3,000   Animal Health products
 
Basel, Switzerland   2,000   Animal Health products
 
  CIBA Vision        

Duluth, GA

 

13,000

 

Vision-related medical devices
 
Grosswallstadt, Germany   4,000   Vision-related medical devices
 
Singapore   5,000   Vision-related medical devices
 

        Substantial progress has been made in the long-term redevelopment of our St. Johann headquarters site in Basel, Switzerland. This project, called "Campus," was started in 2001 with the aim of transforming the site into a center of knowledge with a primary emphasis on international corporate functions and research activities. At that time, changes needed to be made to the Campus, since the site had originally been designed primarily for pharmaceuticals production, but Research and Development had come to account for a greater proportion of our activities at the site. Through December 31, 2009, the total amount paid and committed to be paid on the Campus Project is $1.6 billion. We expect that, through 2015, we will spend more than $2.1 billion on the Campus and to transfer production facilities from the Campus to other sites in the Basel region. We intend to fund these expenditures from internally developed resources.

        In 2009, our Pharmaceuticals Division opened a new technical Research and Development and manufacturing facility in Changshu, China, to support the production of Tekturna/Rasilez and other products. The site was officially opened at the end of 2009, and commercial production is expected to commence at the beginning of 2010. We invested approximately $56 million into this site during 2009, bringing our total investment at the site to $265 million.

        In 2007, NIBR opened a start-up facility for our new R&D center in Shanghai, China (CNIBR) . In 2008, we broke ground on a new facility that was to be home to approximately 400 R&D scientists and approximately 400 other Pharmaceuticals Division personnel. In 2009, we announced that we would expand the scope of the site and invest $1 billion over the next five years to increase the size of CNIBR so that it would become the largest pharmaceutical research and development institute in China, and the third largest Novartis research institute worldwide.

        In June 2008, the division also broke grounds on a new rabies and tick-borne encephalitis manufacturing facility in Marburg, Germany which is expected to require a total investment of approximately $230 million. Construction is proceeding as planned and the official opening of the facility is anticipated in 2010. As of December 31, 2009, the total amount paid and committed to be paid on this project is $149 million.

        In November 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division opened the division's new cell culture-based influenza vaccine manufacturing site in Holly Springs, North Carolina. As of December 31, 2009, the total amount spent on the project is $536 million, including amounts reimbursed by the US government. The total investment in this new facility is expected to be least $900 million, partly supported by grants from the US government and prior investments in flu cell culture technologies at the Novartis Vaccines site in Marburg, Germany.

        In September 2009, the Vaccines and Diagnostics Division set the cornerstone for a new vaccine manufacturing facility in Goiana, in the Pernambuco region of Brazil. The manufacturing plant is part of Novartis Vaccines' strategy to enter the Brazilian market, and is aligned with the government's goal to become self-sufficient in vaccine production. Our total investment in the facility is expected to be up to $500 million. The facility is expected to be operational by the end of 2014.

82


Table of Contents


Environmental Matters

        We integrate core values of environmental protection into our business strategy to add value to the business, manage risk and enhance our reputation.

        We are subject to laws and regulations concerning the environment, safety matters, regulation of chemicals and product safety in the countries where we manufacture and sell our products or otherwise operate our business. These requirements include regulation of the handling, manufacture, transportation, use and disposal of materials, including the discharge of pollutants into the environment. In the normal course of our business, we are exposed to risks relating to possible releases of hazardous substances into the environment which could cause environmental or property damage or personal injuries, and which could require remediation of contaminated soil and groundwater. Under certain laws, we may be required to remediate contamination at third party sites, or at certain of our properties regardless of whether the contamination was caused by us, or by previous occupants of the property.

        See also "Item 3. Key Information—Risk Factors—Environmental liabilities may impact our results of operations" and "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 20."

Item 4A.    Unresolved Staff Comments

Item 5.    Operating and Financial Review and Prospects


5.A  Operating Results

        This operating and financial review should be read together with the Group's consolidated financial statements in this Form 20-F. The consolidated financial statements and the financial information discussed below have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).


OVERVIEW

        Novartis provides healthcare solutions that address the evolving needs of patients and societies worldwide. Our portfolio includes innovative medicines, preventive vaccines and diagnostic tools, generic pharmaceuticals and consumer health products. Novartis is the only company to have leadership positions in each of these areas.

        The Group's businesses are organized in four global operating divisions:

        We believe our strategy will enable Novartis to continue as an industry leader. One of our strategic priorities is to strengthen this portfolio through sustained investments in innovation. Reflecting the benefits of these investments, more than 30 positive regulatory decisions throughout the Group were achieved in 2009 in the US, European Union and Japan. In Japan, a historic six regulatory approvals were granted during the year. Expansions of the portfolio through targeted acquisitions included the 2009 purchase of EBEWE Pharma's generic injectables business in the Sandoz Division, creating a global growth platform and improving access to generic oncology medicines.

83


Table of Contents

        Results from continuing operations in 2008 and 2007 exclude contributions from the Medical Nutrition and Gerber Business Units, which were divested in 2007 and resulted in a combined after-tax divestment gain of $5.2 billion. The sale of these businesses in separate transactions to Nestlé S.A. completed the divestment of remaining non-healthcare businesses. Both were previously included in the Consumer Health Division, but are now classified as discontinued operations in the consolidated financial statements.

        The underlying double-digit expansion in Pharmaceuticals, ranked as one of the industry's fastest-growing businesses based on market share, led the Group's healthcare portfolio in 2009 to another year of record results. Vaccines and Diagnostics achieved exceptionally high sales by rapidly developing and delivering influenza A (H1N1) pandemic vaccines to address the public health threat.

        Net sales rose 7% (+11% in local currencies, lc) to $44.3 billion on the underlying expansion in all divisions: Pharmaceuticals (+12% lc), Vaccines and Diagnostics (+39% lc), Sandoz (+5% lc) and Consumer Health (+5% lc). Top-performing regions included Europe ($18.4 billion, +10% lc) and the United States ($14.3 billion, +11% lc) as well as the top six emerging markets ($4.0 billion, +17% lc) of Brazil, China, India, Russia, South Korea and Turkey. Higher volumes contributed 10 percentage points of growth, while acquisitions and price changes together added one percentage point of sales growth. The stronger US dollar compared to 2008 reduced full-year growth by four percentage points.

        Operating income grew 11% to $10.0 billion in 2009, which resulted in the operating income margin rising to 22.5% of net sales from 21.6% in 2008. The stronger US dollar compared to 2008 reduced operating income growth by nine percentage points. Core operating income, which excludes exceptional items and amortization of intangible assets in both periods, grew 11% to $11.4 billion on improvements in Pharmaceuticals and Vaccines and Diagnostics as well as productivity gains in all divisions. The core operating income margin rose to 25.8% of net sales from 25.0% in 2008.

        Net income rose 4% to $8.5 billion, while basic EPS was up 3% to $3.70. Core net income of $10.3 billion (+8%) rose at a slower pace than operating income as increased contributions from associated companies were partially reduced by Alcon-related financing costs. Core earnings per share were $4.50 in 2009, up from $4.18 in 2008.

        Headquartered in Basel, Switzerland, the Group employed approximately 100,000 full-time equivalent associates as of December 31, 2009, with operations in approximately 140 countries around the world.


FACTORS AFFECTING RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

        A number of key factors influence the Group's results of operations and the development of our businesses during a period in which the global healthcare market faces an unprecedented range of opportunities and challenges.

        Fundamentals of the healthcare industry remain robust amid expectations for ongoing growth due to long-term demographic and socioeconomic trends worldwide. Both in industrialized countries and emerging markets, the aging of the population, along with sedentary lifestyles and poor nutritional habits, are producing a rising incidence of chronic diseases. These and other factors are prompting greater use of medicines. Consistent investments in innovation and advancing technologies also are supporting the development of new medicines to better treat many diseases.

        At the same time, adverse factors have created a business environment that has reduced expectations for growth and increased concerns about industrywide risks. The growing burden of healthcare costs as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product in many countries has led governments and payors to focus on controlling spending even more tightly. This has been exacerbated by the lingering effects of the recent global economic and financial crisis.

        As a result, the healthcare industry operates in an increasingly challenging environment. Payors around the world are intensifying actions to cut costs and restrict access to higher-priced new medicines

84


Table of Contents


while also creating initiatives to increase utilization of generic pharmaceuticals. At the same time, investment costs necessary for the successful research and development of new medicines have risen dramatically, in part because of increasing scrutiny of drug safety and efficacy. Consolidation in the pharmaceutical industry has led to the emergence of larger competitors, but it also has provided opportunities to attract new high-caliber associates as some competitors significantly reduce staffs through massive integration and cost-cutting measures.

        In response to this fast-changing environment, Novartis has been building its presence for many years in businesses that go beyond the traditional focus on patent-protected medicines—a strategy now being adopted by some competitors. These areas include preventive vaccines and diagnostics (Vaccines and Diagnostics), generic pharmaceuticals and biosimilars (Sandoz), and readily available consumer health products (Consumer Health). We have invested heavily in all of these businesses through internal initiatives intended to drive organic growth as well as through targeted acquisitions. Our strategy is to continue to invest in strengthening these businesses.

        Novartis believes this portfolio is well-positioned to address the needs of patients and customers, providing a broad range of products that offer important treatment benefits while helping to reduce overall healthcare costs.

        This strategy also helps Novartis to mitigate the negative impact of economic challenges faced by healthcare systems and many patients, particularly in the area of patent-protected medicines. It also offers attractive opportunities for future growth in diverse market segments.


Fundamental Drivers Remain Strong

        With demographics and socioeconomic developments driving long-term growth in demand for healthcare, Novartis expects its businesses to keep expanding in the coming years, both in the established markets of the US, Western Europe and Japan as well as in many emerging markets.

Aging Population Faces Increasing Healthcare Needs

        People age 65 and older represent a growing proportion of the world's population. The overall population has doubled in the last 50 years to approximately seven billion and is expected to surpass nine billion by 2050. While the overall population grows, increasing life expectancy and declining birth rates are increasing the proportion of the elderly around the world.

        Nearly 500 million people worldwide were age 65 and older in 2006, and this number is expected to increase to one billion by 2030, according to a study published in 2007 by the US National Institute of Aging and the US Department of State. The proportion of this age group in the US is projected to rise to 13% from 8% by 2030, surpassing the number of children in the coming decade. In addition, the number of people over age 85 is increasing rapidly.

        While the elderly represent a greater percentage of the population in developed countries, in emerging markets older populations generally are growing more rapidly as a proportion of the overall population. The increase in life expectancy is partly due to improving healthcare, but the aging of the population also brings burdens in the form of increasing medical costs for governments, healthcare systems and patients. Studies show the incidence of disease, and use of medicines and healthcare resources, rises with age.

        Novartis has many products in its portfolio that could provide benefits to the aging population by treating diseases and conditions that disproportionately afflict the elderly, including cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer's disease, osteoporosis, age-related macular degeneration and influenza.

Emerging Markets Grow Faster than Developed Countries

        The global pharmaceuticals market (both patent-protected and generic pharmaceuticals) is expected to grow 4-6% in 2010 in local currencies, a similar pace to 2008 and 2009, to more than $825 billion,

85


Table of Contents


according to IMS Health, a leading provider of industry data. Further, IMS Health has predicted a 4-7% compound annual growth rate for the industry through 2013, taking into account the impact of the global economy, the changing mix of products and the rising influence of healthcare access and funding issues.

        Key trends of recent years—including faster growth in emerging markets than in established markets, tougher regulations, more stringent cost-control measures and patent expirations for many top-selling branded medicines—may become even more pronounced in 2010 and in the coming years.

        Among developed countries, the US—the world's largest pharmaceuticals market—is forecast by IMS to grow approximately 3-5% in 2010 to approximately $310 billion, while the top five European countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) are forecast to grow 1-3% to approximately $150 billion as rising costs continue to pressure governments. In Japan, overall pharmaceutical sales are expected to contract slightly to approximately $90 billion due to the biennial price reductions.

        At a time of slowing pharmaceutical sales growth in many industrialized countries, the longer-term economic expansion in many emerging markets has led to higher growth rates and an increasing contribution to the industry's global performance.

        The leading emerging markets (defined by IMS Health as Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, South Korea and Turkey) are forecast by IMS to sustain an aggregated 12-14% pace in 2010 and reach more than $105 billion in annual sales. Despite challenging economic conditions, many of these countries are benefiting from increasing government spending on healthcare as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product as well as broader public and private funding to improve access to medicines. However, some of these countries are expected to face slowing growth in 2010 given the difficult economic conditions, increasing government deficits and initiatives to reduce healthcare spending.

        Many of these emerging markets have hybrid conditions with little, if any, distinction between pharmaceuticals, OTC and generic brands. Given the Group's portfolio, Novartis has a unique ability to operate across a broad spectrum of medicines to treat various diseases and has launched initiatives to take better advantage of growth opportunities. Emerging markets and other markets excluding the US, Europe and Japan accounted for approximately 22% of Group net sales in 2009, and they are expected to make increasingly significant contributions to future results of operations.

Market
  2010
industry
growth
forecast
  2010
industry
sales
forecast
  2008-2013
industry
CAGR
  2013
industry
sales

Global

    4-6%   $820-30 billion   4-7%   $975 billion to 1.0 trillion

US

    3-5%   $310-320 billion   2-5%   $325-355 billion

Top 5 Europe

    1-3%   $145-155 billion   1-4%   $160-190 billion

Top emerging markets(1)

    12-14%   $105-115 billion   13-16%   $160-190 billion

Japan

    -2% to 0%   $86-90 billion   1-4%   $97-107 billion

Rest of World

    6-8%   $160-170 billion   5-8%   $185-215 billion

Source: IMS Health

(1)
Defined by IMS Health as Brazil, China, India, Mexico, Russia, South Korea and Turkey.

Lifestyle Changes Boost Prevalence of Chronic Illnesses

        Economic growth and shifting nutritional habits have led to dramatic changes in lifestyles. Obesity and sedentary lifestyles are important risk factors for diabetes, cardiovascular conditions, cancer and other

86


Table of Contents


serious diseases. Once considered a problem only in wealthy countries, the prevalence of people who are overweight or are obese is dramatically increasing in low- and middle-income countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported in a 2006 study. For example, the WHO has predicted the global diabetes population will grow to more than 200 million in 2010, and to 330 million in 2025, compared to only 30 million in 1985, with developing countries bearing the brunt of this epidemic. Novartis offers many products to help patients with chronic diseases, and will continue to make significant R&D investments in new treatments for these growing health threats.

Scientific Advances Drive the Discovery of New Medicines

        Ongoing developments in technologies and advances in the understanding of diseases are laying a foundation for the creation of new treatments for medical conditions for which current treatment options are inadequate or non-existent. R&D investments by the global pharmaceutical industry have risen more than tenfold during the last 20 years, according to the US industry trade association PhRMA, leading to a significant increase in the number of drugs in development pipelines.

        Based on recent advances in technologies, particularly the analysis of human genome data, the number of drugs in development is expected to rise further based on improving information about the role of specific genes and proteins in the human body. Like other research-based pharmaceutical companies, Novartis is making major investments in these new technologies. These could have a fundamental effect on product development and, in turn, could affect future results of operations.


Increasingly Challenging Business Environment

        While the global healthcare market has grown steadily, the competitive operating environment has become increasingly more challenging for pharmaceutical companies. Factors include increasing cost pressures from payors, the threat of patent expirations for leading products, a period of relatively low industrywide R&D productivity and greater scrutiny of drug safety by regulatory agencies. Novartis believes it is well-positioned to address these challenges.

Patent Expirations and Generic Competition Pressure Industry

        The pharmaceutical industry faces an unprecedented level of patent expirations in the coming years, a primary factor cited by experts as limiting global industry growth. During the next five years, IMS Health estimates that products currently generating approximately $140 billion in annual sales are expected to face generic competition. At the same time, the introduction of new products is not expected to generate the same magnitude of industry sales as the products losing market exclusivity. The pharmaceuticals industry faces a continuing high level of patent expirations, with branded products representing approximately $24 billion in combined annual sales set to lose patent protection in 2009, similar to levels seen in recent years, according to IMS Health.

        Ability to successfully secure and defend intellectual property rights is particularly important for the Pharmaceuticals Division. The loss of exclusivity for one or more important products—due to patent expiration, generic challenges, competition from new branded products or changes in regulatory status—could have a material negative impact on the Group's results of operations.

        Novartis takes legally permissible steps to defend its intellectual property rights. These include initiating patent infringement lawsuits against generic drug manufacturers and, to a lesser degree, against other research-based pharmaceutical companies.

        Competition could come in a number of forms: patent challenges, the entry of generic versions of another medicine in the same therapeutic class, greater utilization of generic medicines in other therapeutic classes, or the regular expiration of patents in various markets, particularly the US and Europe.

87


Table of Contents

        Some of our best-selling products are expected to face significant competition in the coming years due to the end of market exclusivity following the expiry of patent protection:

        Some pharmaceutical products are also the subject of ongoing patent litigation. Zoledronic acid, the active ingredient in Zometa as well as in Reclast/Aclasta (osteoporosis), is currently the subject of US patent litigation.

Pressures Mount to Reduce Drug Prices and Increase Access to Medicines

        Prices for healthcare products, primarily patented medicines, continue to generate controversy and political debate in both industrialized and developing countries. These debates focus on the relative costs of medicines at a time of rapidly rising overall expenditures for healthcare and in the midst of an economic slowdown. Payors—primarily government-controlled agencies as well as insurance companies and managed care organizations in the US—have been exerting pressure for some time to cut prices, urging physicians to use more generic pharmaceuticals and restricting access to new medicines. Patients also are being forced to pay a larger portion of their own healthcare costs, which has limited sales growth of patented pharmaceuticals in countries such as the US, where generic medicines now account for approximately 70% of total prescription volumes. At the same time, this trend has led to growth in the use of generic pharmaceuticals and OTC products, market segments in which Novartis is one of the world leaders.

Regulatory Approvals Drop Amid Intense Competition and Safety Scrutiny Rises

        Although scientific advances continue to lead to breakthroughs for patients, the pharmaceutical industry has suffered from a dearth of regulatory approvals for new drugs in recent years coupled with a dramatic increase in the cost per drug approved.

        For example, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved 26 entirely new drugs (new molecular entities) in 2009. This follows 24 new approvals in 2008 and only 18 in 2007, one of the lowest single-year totals since 1983, when there were 14. These approval levels compare with the average annual approval rate of more than 30 new medicines per year in the period from 1996 to 2004.

        This decline in productivity comes at a time when the worldwide pharmaceutical industry is spending nearly $50 billion each year on R&D activities, according to the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. As a result, industry R&D spending per new molecular entity approved has risen more than 200% to $3.7 billion for 2006-2008 compared to only $1.2 billion per drug for 1998-2000.

        Healthcare regulators around the world are increasingly focusing not just on product safety and efficacy, but also the risk/benefit profile of developmental drugs in light of several widely publicized issues in recent years. Regulators are requiring more clinical trial data with a significantly higher number of

88


Table of Contents


patients and more detailed analyses. As a result, obtaining regulatory approvals has become more challenging.

        The post-approval regulatory burden on pharmaceutical companies has also been growing. Approved drugs have increasingly been subject to requirements such as risk evaluation and mitigation strategies, comparative effectiveness studies and requirements to conduct post-approval Phase IV clinical trials to gather detailed safety and other data on products. These requirements have the effect of making the maintenance of regulatory approvals increasingly expensive, and further heightening the risk of recalls or loss of market share.

        Similar to our industry peers, we have suffered setbacks in recent years in gaining regulatory approvals for new products as well as being able to keep products on the market.

Other Novartis Businesses Face Opportunities and Challenges

        Businesses within the Group's healthcare portfolio are all affected to some extent by the opportunities and challenges facing the industry, but at the same time have specific factors impacting their own specific operations.

Sandoz

        The strong longer-term growth outlook for the generic pharmaceuticals market and the ongoing loss of exclusivity for several important industry products can create significant opportunities for Sandoz, but competition in this sector is very intense. Sandoz believes it has competitive advantages based on leadership positions in the world's top generics markets, presence in countries covering 90% of the world's population, as well as a track record in gaining regulatory approvals for differentiated generics that apply advanced technologies or are challenging to manufacture.

        However, many of the division's products are considered commodities, with multiple sellers competing aggressively on price. In addition, pressure is increasing in some markets, particularly Europe and the US, to further reduce prices for generic pharmaceuticals. These pressures stem from government regulations seeking to reduce healthcare costs as well as from various distributors aggressively seeking to increase their own profit margins at the expense of generic manufacturers.

        In addition, a number of factors have tended to limit the availability or decrease the value of marketing exclusivity periods granted to generic companies in certain markets for marketing the first generic version of a medicine. These can be a significant source of revenue for generic companies, particularly the 180-day exclusivity period granted in the US by the Hatch-Waxman Act. Among the negative factors are aggressive steps taken by branded pharmaceutical companies to counter the growth of generics, and increased competition among generic companies to achieve these periods of exclusivity.

Vaccines and Diagnostics

        The demand for some products such as influenza vaccines is seasonal, while the demand for others such as pediatric combination vaccines depends upon birth rates in developed countries and emerging markets. Some vaccines that make an important contribution to the division's net sales and profits, particularly the key influenza vaccines, are considered commodities, meaning there are few therapeutic differences among products offered by a number of competitors. In addition, the market for pandemic and seasonal influenza vaccines is experiencing an unprecedented period of significant volatility given the global A (H1N1) influenza pandemic. While deliveries of pandemic vaccines provided significant contributions to results in 2008 (from A (H5N1) vaccines) and 2009 (from A (H1N1) vaccines), no guarantee can be made that these types of influenza vaccines will provide contributions in 2010 and the future. The most important vaccine development projects involve two vaccines—Menveo and MenB—to combat different serogroups of meningococcal meningitis. If successful, we expect the development and

89


Table of Contents


regulatory approvals of these vaccines to be important to the medium- and longer-term success of our vaccines business.

Consumer Health

        Consumer spending, economic conditions, intense competition and efforts in many countries to shift healthcare costs to patients are among factors influencing results in Consumer Health, which relies on consumer acceptance and loyalty to leading brands in order to generate growth. All of the Consumer Health businesses have been negatively impacted by the ongoing economic crisis. OTC additionally faces significant competition from other major healthcare companies as well as from growing use in the US of so-called "private label" brands (when a retailer sells consumer products under the retailer's own brand names). In Animal Health, industry consolidation has changed the competitive landscape, prompting this business to maximize its R&D potential through closer collaboration with other divisions. In CIBA Vision, trends in the use of contact lenses are dependent upon factors that include economic cycles, consumer acceptance of new and existing products, innovations in lens technologies and consumer preference for these products.

Legal proceedings may have a significant negative effect on results of operations

        In recent years, there has been a trend of increasing litigation against the industries of which we are a part, especially in the US. A number of our subsidiaries are, and will likely continue to be, subject to various legal proceedings that arise from time to time. As a result, we may become subject to substantial liabilities that may not be covered by insurance. Litigation is inherently unpredictable, and large verdicts occur. As a consequence, we may in the future incur judgments or enter into settlements of claims that may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations or cash flows.

        Governments and regulatory authorities have been stepping up their compliance and law enforcement activities in recent years in key areas, including corruption, marketing practices, antitrust and trade sanctions. Our businesses have been subject to significant civil litigation as well as governmental investigations and information requests by regulatory authorities.

        For example, Novartis Pharmaceutical Corporation (NPC) has recently entered into a plea agreement with the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (the EDPA) to resolve criminal allegations related to the marketing and promotion of our epilepsy therapy Trileptal. NPC is currently negotiating with the EDPA to resolve civil claims relating to Trileptal. In the fourth quarter of 2009, Novartis increased its provision relating to these matters by $318 million to a total of $397 million. Novartis is also cooperating with a US federal investigation regarding potential off-label marketing and promotion and payments to healthcare providers in connection with five other products: Diovan, Exforge, Sandostatin, Tekturna and Zelnorm. It is not possible at this time to predict the outcomes of this investigation. For further information on various legal proceedings, see "Item 18. Financial statements—note 20".


Novartis Strategies for Sustainable Growth

        Novartis believes it has an excellent portfolio to address the demands of the fast-changing healthcare environment.

        We are implementing longer-term strategic initiatives to create sustainable growth. Key actions include strengthening our healthcare portfolio, driving innovation through R&D investments, expanding in high-growth markets, improving operational efficiency and developing our people in a performance-oriented culture.

90


Table of Contents

Selectively Strengthen Healthcare Portfolio

        Each of the Novartis divisions is expected to play a significant role in the future success of the Group, providing opportunities for growth by offering a range of medicines and vaccines to patients, physicians and payors. We will continue to evaluate internal and external opportunities to improve the competitiveness of these businesses and better position the Group for success. The diversification of these Novartis businesses also helps to balance industry risks.

Innovative Medicines

        The aim of the Pharmaceuticals Division is to provide patients and physicians with new and better prescription medicines that deliver improved efficacy and fewer side effects, as well as to address unmet medical needs. Novartis ranks as one of the top 10 companies worldwide based on sales of patent-protected medicines, with leading positions in cardiovascular and cancer treatments and an expanding presence in neuroscience. Viewed as having one of the most respected pipelines in the industry, we will continue to invest heavily in Research & Development. We are also reviewing ways to more efficiently support new product launches by using new commercial models focused on delivering health outcomes for patients and payors, particularly in the US and Europe. We are also committed to being a preferred partner for strategic alliances with biotechnology companies, both for development compounds and new technologies, and these collaborations will remain important to future business developments.

Prevention

        The Vaccines and Diagnostics Division markets vaccines (Novartis Vaccines) as well as blood-testing diagnostics (Novartis Diagnostics) that protect against many life-threatening diseases. We further strengthened this business in September 2007 through a strategic R&D alliance with Intercell, an Austrian biotechnology company focusing on vaccines development. Along with innovation, geographic expansion is a top priority, which was underscored by an agreement in late 2009 to acquire a majority stake in Zhejiang Tianyuan to build a vaccines leader in China. Payors around the world are increasingly recognizing the important role that vaccines play in disease prevention. Given the capabilities, strong pipeline and high barriers to entry in this industry segment, Vaccines and Diagnostics is expected to be a source of future growth.

Cost-Saving Alternatives

        Sandoz markets generic products that replace branded medicines after patent expiry, providing cost-effective alternatives for patients, physicians and payors. Sandoz is the world's second-largest generic pharmaceuticals company based on sales. Competitive advantages include strengths in providing regular as well as differentiated generics, particularly extended-release and injectable formulations of medicines and biosimilars (follow-on versions of previously approved biotechnology drugs). The acquisition in 2009 of EBEWE Pharma's specialty medicines business provided a new growth platform in differentiated products and is expected to improve access to generic injectable oncology medicines. Given these broad capabilities, which provide access to higher-value areas of the generic pharmaceuticals market, Sandoz is expected to become an increasing contributor to our future results of operations.

Patient and Consumer Empowerment

        The Consumer Health Division comprises the OTC, Animal Health and CIBA Vision Business Units, all of which provide high-quality consumer healthcare products with well-known brands achieved through marketing excellence. These businesses have gained share in their respective segments through a focus on strategic brands, product innovation and expansion in emerging markets. While divesting non-healthcare activities, these three businesses have been strengthened through internal investments in product innovation, geographic expansion and targeted acquisitions.

91


Table of Contents

Eye Care

        On January 4, 2010, Novartis announced its intention to gain full ownership of Alcon Inc. (NYSE: ACL) by first completing the April 2008 agreement with Nestlé S.A. to acquire a 77% majority stake and subsequently entering into an all-share direct merger with Alcon for the remaining 23% minority stake. Novartis believes this merger, which will be implemented under the Swiss Merger Act, is in the interest of all stakeholders and will provide the needed clarity on Alcon's future. Alcon will strengthen the Group's healthcare portfolio with greater access to the fast-growing global eye care sector, which is driven by an aging population, innovation and emerging markets. Alcon and Novartis have attractive global activities in eye care, each offering their own competitive positions in highly complementary segments that together cover more than 70% of activities in the global vision care sector. Aligning these strengths can result in offering even more compelling products that make a difference for patients around the world. Following successful completion of the merger, Alcon would be established as a new Novartis division that incorporates these highly complementary assets. This new eye care division will have enhanced opportunities to accelerate expansion in high-growth regions, generate greater value from combined product portfolios and capitalize on strengthened R&D capabilities.

Step Up Innovation

        Maintaining a competitive advantage in the healthcare industry requires significant R&D investments. The ability of Novartis to continue to grow all of our businesses and replace sales lost due to the end of exclusivity for important products depends upon the capability of the Group's R&D activities to identify and develop high-potential products and bring them quickly to market.

        Like our competitors, Novartis will continue making significant investments in the discovery of novel pharmaceuticals and vaccines. We are also taking steps to accelerate R&D activities throughout the Group and to find ways to lower attrition rates among late-stage pipeline products. For example, a reorganization of the Pharmaceuticals Development organization has strengthened project focus, streamlined organizational structures and simplified decision-making processes.

        Novartis has built capabilities and drug discovery expertise at the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR). Scientists are seeking ways to understand molecular pathways to provide new and proprietary targets for drugs. NIBR scientists have been successful in using this approach to discover treatments for disorders from cancer to degenerative diseases.

        An outcome of the work at NIBR has been a major expansion of targets involving biologic therapies, which now represent more than 25% of our preclinical pharmaceuticals research portfolio. Biologic treatments, often referred to as "large molecules," are made from living cells and stimulate a response against specific disease targets. They often are intended to treat diseases that have been difficult to treat with "small molecule" medicines based on chemical substances.

        The quality of our current development pipeline reflects investments made in the Group's own R&D activities, in many cases more than 10-20 years ago, as well as recent acquisitions and licensing collaborations. We have consistently had one of the highest R&D investment rates as a percentage of net sales in the industry, reflecting our commitment to bringing innovative and differentiated products to patients with novel therapeutic benefits.

        Our Pharmaceuticals Division uses up to one-third of its annual R&D expenditures to reach licensing agreements with other companies, particularly specialized biotechnology firms, to co-develop promising compounds. These collaborations enable us to capitalize on the potential of these compounds and to expand our development pipeline. Complementing internal R&D activities, Novartis (like other companies) has entered into a significant number of alliances in recent years. Equity investments are sometimes made in a licensing partner, or a decision is made to fully acquire a company to gain exclusive access to novel compounds. The industrywide decline in R&D productivity in recent years, however, has led to increasing competition for collaborations with specialized players at the forefront of their fields.

92


Table of Contents


Funding requirements for R&D activities are likely to continue to grow in the future and are expected to continue rising at a faster rate than net sales. These investments, however, are critical to our continuing success. In 2009, we invested $7.5 billion in R&D activities throughout the Group, a 3% increase from 2008 and representing 16.9% of net sales.

Expand in High-Growth Markets

        Novartis is expanding in high-growth markets around the world, particularly the top markets of Brazil, China, India, Russia, South Korea and Turkey. Even in light of weakened economic conditions in some of these countries, long-term investments are crucial to capturing market share and being well-positioned for their eventual economic recovery.

        Novartis has been taking significant actions to increase its presence in a number of these priority markets as well as adapting commercial models to better meet the needs of other emerging markets.

        A key market for expansion is China, where Novartis announced plans in 2009 to invest $1 billion over five years to build the country's largest pharmaceutical R&D institute. The Chinese market is expected to continue growing at more than 20% annually and contribute 20% of overall global industry growth through 2013, even becoming a top-three market by 2013 based on annual sales compared to its current status as the tenth largest, according to IMS Health.

        A cross-divisional operating structure is being expanded following its initial implementation in 2007 to accelerate growth in smaller emerging markets and better position the comprehensive presence of all Novartis products. These types of markets include Northern and Sub-Saharan Africa, Central Asia and some countries in Southeast Asia.

        In 2009, Novartis generated $28.7 billion, or approximately 65% (2008: 64%) of the Group's net sales in the world's seven largest developed markets, while $4.0 billion, or approximately 9% (2008: 9%) of net sales came from the Group's six priority emerging markets of Brazil, China, India, Russia, South Korea and Turkey. This relative contribution was adversely impacted in 2009 by the strength of the US dollar. At the same time, combined net sales in these six priority emerging markets grew at a far more rapid pace of 17% lc in 2009 compared to 10% lc growth achieved in the seven largest developed markets. As a result, emerging markets are expected to make increasingly significant contributions to our future results of operations.

Improve Organizational Efficiency

        Novartis is integrating the drive for greater productivity and increased efficiency into its operations, improving speed while freeing up resources to focus on customers and growth initiatives. Forward, the Group-wide initiative launched in late 2007 to simplify structures and redesign the way Novartis operates, has been completed a year ahead of schedule after progressing rapidly and achieving more than $2.3 billion of cumulative cost savings since 2007 and exceeding its 2010 goal of $1.6 billion.

        Other initiatives are underway throughout the Group, underscoring how productivity has become integrated in the organization. These include Customer First, launched in initial countries in 2009 to maximize the cross-divisional potential of the Novartis portfolio for customers. In the US, a new sales and marketing organizational structure started on January 1, 2009, for the primary care portfolio of the Pharmaceuticals Division. The Customer Centric Initiative implemented a new regional US business model to better address diverging customer needs. Five new regional units were created, replacing national sales forces.

        Programs also are being implemented to streamline manufacturing operations, seeking to match production capacity more closely to market demands and leveraging the Group's network of sites to ensure greater flexibility and to sustain growth amid changing conditions.

93


Table of Contents

Sustain Our Performance-Oriented Culture

        We are proud of our inspiring and challenging work environment. Novartis rewards those who invest their talent and ideas to create value for patients and customers. Our associates should mirror the societies in which we do business, so creating a diverse and inclusive working environment is critical to success. We want to develop leaders internally by providing opportunities for growth. Novartis is implementing programs to reduce the turnover of associates in emerging markets, as well as to ensure talent identification and promotion throughout the organization.


Acquisitions, Divestments and Other Significant Transactions

        Novartis has made several acquisitions, strategic investments and divestments in recent years that have had a significant and ongoing impact on its financial condition and results of operations, see "Item 18. Financial Statements—note 2".

        In 2007, we narrowed our focus solely to healthcare through the divestments of the Medical Nutrition (effective July 1) and Gerber Business Units (effective September 1).

        At the same time, contributions from strategic acquisitions have a significant impact on the Group's results of operations. The remaining stake in Chiron Corporation was acquired in April 2006 to create the new Vaccines and Diagnostics Division, while Sandoz strengthened its position as a world leader in generic pharmaceuticals through the 2005 acquisitions of Hexal AG and Eon Labs, Inc.

        As a result of these acquisitions—and also through the planned full acquisition of Alcon—the Group's results of operations are increasingly affected by charges for the amortization of intangible assets as well as impairment charges and other one-time costs related to the integration of acquisitions. These are described in more detail under "Core results as defined by Novartis".

        Novartis continually evaluates potential opportunities for targeted acquisitions or other strategic transactions, including product licensing agreements, that would improve our competitive position and create value for shareholders.

Acquisitions in 2009

Sandoz—EBEWE Pharma

        On May 20, Novartis announced a definitive agreement for Sandoz to acquire the specialty generic injectables business of EBEWE Pharma for EUR 925 million ($1.3 billion) in cash, to be adjusted for any cash or debt assumed at closing. This transaction was completed on September 22, 2009. The first payment of EUR 600 million ($0.9 billion) was made in 2009, with the balance to be paid in 2010. Based on a final purchase price allocation, EBEWE's identified net assets were $0.7 billion, which resulted in goodwill of $0.5 billion in 2009. Results of operations from this acquisition, which were not material in 2009, were included from the completion date of this transaction.

Vaccines and Diagnostics—Zhejiang Tianyuan

        On November 4, Novartis announced a definitive agreement to acquire an 85% stake in the Chinese vaccines company Zhejiang Tianyuan Bio-Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. as part of a strategic initiative to build a vaccines industry leader in China and expand the Group's limited presence in this fast-growing market segment. China is the world's third largest vaccines market, with annual industry sales of more than $1 billion and expectations for sustained double-digit growth given the government's commitment to improve access to quality healthcare. Terms call for Novartis to purchase an 85% majority interest for approximately $125 million in cash. The transaction, which is expected to be completed in 2010, is subject to certain closing conditions, including receipt of government and regulatory approvals in China.

94


Table of Contents

Pharmaceuticals—Corthera

        On December 23, Novartis announced a definitive agreement to acquire Corthera Inc., gaining worldwide rights to relaxin for the treatment of acute heart failure. Novartis will assume full responsibility for the development and commercialization of relaxin. The purchase price consists of an initial payment of $120 million. Corthera's current shareholders are eligible to receive additional payments of up to $500 million contingent upon clinical milestones, regulatory approvals and the achievement of commercialization targets. The transaction, which is subject to certain closing conditions and regulatory approvals, is expected to be completed in 2010.

Other Significant Transactions in 2009

Corporate—Issuance of bond in US dollars

        On February 5, Novartis issued a two-tranche bond totaling $5 billion registered with the US Securities and Exchange Commission as part of a shelf registration statement filed by Novartis in 2008. A 4.125% five-year tranche totaling $2 billion was issued by the Group's US entity, Novartis Capital Corp., while a 5.125% 10-year tranche totaling $3 billion was issued by the Group's Bermuda unit, Novartis Securities Investment Ltd. Both tranches are unconditionally guaranteed by Novartis AG.

Corporate—Issuance of bond in euros

        On June 2, Novartis issued a EUR 1.5 billion bond (approximately $2.1 billion) with a coupon of 4.25% under its EUR 15 billion Euro Medium Term Note Programme. The seven-year bond, issued by Novartis Finance S.A., Luxembourg, has a maturity date of June 15, 2016, and is guaranteed by Novartis AG.

Corporate—Novartis India Ltd.

        On June 8, Novartis completed a tender offer to acquire additional shares from public shareholders and increased its stake in the majority-owned Indian subsidiary, Novartis India Ltd., to 76.4% from 50.9% for approximately INR 3.8 billion ($80 million). Almost all large institutional investors and quasi-institutional shareholders participated in the offer. This transaction resulted in $57 million of goodwill.

Pharmaceuticals—Idenix

        On August 5, Novartis did not participate in an underwritten public offering by Idenix Pharmaceuticals, which reduced the Group's stake to 47% from the pre-offering level of 53%. As a result of this offering, Novartis no longer controls this company, so Idenix was deconsolidated with effect from September 1, 2009. Idenix has been accounted for on an equity basis since this date, which had no material impact on the Group's consolidated income statement.

2009 Subsequent Event—Alcon

        In 2008, Novartis entered into an agreement to purchase Nestle's 77% stake in Alcon Inc. for up to $38.5 billion, or an average price of $168 per share. Under the terms of the agreement, Novartis acquired a 25% Alcon stake from Nestlé in 2008 for $10.4 billion, or $143 per share. The purchase of the 25% stake was financed from internal cash reserves and external short-term financing.

        On January 4, 2010, Novartis exercised its call option to acquire Nestlé's remaining 52% Alcon stake for $28.1 billion (contains the 17% control premium for the 77% stake over Alcon's share price of $143 at the time of the April 2008 announcement), or $180 per share. Upon completion of this transaction, Novartis will own a 77% majority stake in Alcon. The purchase of the 52% stake, which is subject to required regulatory approvals, is expected to be completed in the second half of 2010. Novartis will not

95


Table of Contents


control Alcon prior to the closing of the purchase of the 52% stake. This purchase will be funded from available liquidity and external debt financing.

        On January 4, 2010, Novartis also announced its proposal to, upon completion of the Nestlé transaction, enter into an all-share direct merger with Alcon for the remaining 23% minority stake. Novartis believes this merger, which is governed under the Swiss Merger Act, is in the interest of all stakeholders and will provide the needed clarity on Alcon's future. Novartis proposed a fixed exchange ratio of 2.80 Novartis shares for each remaining Alcon share. Based on the Novartis closing share price of CHF 56.50 on December 30, 2009 (the last trading day on the SIX Swiss Stock Exchange before the announcement) and an exchange rate of CHF 1.04 = $1.00, this proposal represents an implied price of $153 per Alcon share and a 12% premium to Alcon's unaffected publicly traded share price as determined by Novartis of $137 per share. Alcon's closing share price was $164.35 on December 31, 2009 (the last trading day on the New York Stock Exchange before the announcement). The merger would be conditional on the closing of the 52% stake purchase from Nestlé and would require approval by the Boards of Directors of Novartis and Alcon. The merger would also require two-thirds approval by the shareholders of Novartis and Alcon voting at their respective meetings. Under Swiss law, Novartis has the right to vote its Alcon stake in favor of the proposed merger.

Acquisitions in 2008

Corporate—Alcon

        On April 7, Novartis announced an agreement with Nestlé S.A. under which Novartis obtained rights to acquire majority ownership of Alcon Inc. (NYSE: ACL), a Swiss-registered company listed only on the New York Stock Exchange. The potential total value of this transaction is up to approximately $38.5 billion. On July 7, 2008, Novartis acquired a 25% stake in Alcon, representing 74 million shares, from Nestlé for $10.4 billion in cash. At December 31, 2009, Alcon's share price on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) was $164.35, which was above the Group's carrying value of $136.88 per share for this strategic investment.

Pharmaceuticals—Speedel

        On July 10, Novartis announced the all-cash purchase of an additional 51.7% stake in Speedel Holding AG (SIX: SPPN) through off-exchange transactions together with plans to buy all remaining shares in the Swiss biopharmaceuticals company in a mandatory public tender offer. In September 2009, Speedel shares were delisted from the SIX Swiss Exchange and Novartis holds now all shares. The price for the 90.5% interest not previously held was CHF 939 million ($888 million) excluding $26 million of cash held by Speedel as of the July 2008 acquisition date of majority control. Speedel has been fully consolidated as a subsidiary since the July acquisition of a majority stake. Based on a final purchase price allocation, Speedel's identified net assets were $472 million, which resulted in goodwill of $493 million in 2008. As a result of this purchase price allocation, the value of the initial 9.5% stake rose by $38 million, which was recorded in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income. The consolidation of Speedel resulted in immaterial amounts being included in the Group's consolidated income and operating cash flow statements for 2008 and 2009.

Pharmaceuticals—Protez

        On June 4, Novartis agreed to acquire Protez Pharmaceuticals, a privately held US biopharmaceuticals company, gaining access to PTZ601, a broad-spectrum antibiotic in Phase II development against potentially fatal drug-resistant bacterial infections. Novartis paid in total $102 million in cash to acquire 100% of Protez, whose owners are eligible for additional payments of up to $300 million contingent upon the future success of PTZ601. Protez has been consolidated since the transaction completion on July 17. Based on the purchase price allocation, identified net assets from Protez amounted to $72 million, which resulted in goodwill of $30 million. The consolidation of Protez resulted in

96


Table of Contents


immaterial amounts being included in the Group's consolidated income and operating cash flow statements for 2008 and 2009.

Pharmaceuticals—Nektar pulmonary business

        On October 21, Novartis agreed to acquire Nektar Therapeutics Inc.'s pulmonary business unit for $115 million in cash. In this transaction, which was completed on December 31, 2008, Novartis acquired research, development and manufacturing assets of Nektar's pulmonary business unit, including tangible assets as well as intellectual property, intangible assets and related expertise. The full purchase price was allocated to the net assets acquired with no residual goodwill.

Other Significant Transactions in 2008

Corporate—Issuance of Swiss franc bonds

        On June 26, Novartis issued two Swiss franc bonds totaling CHF 1.5 billion (approximately $1.4 billion) in the Swiss capital market, with each listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange. One was a 3.5% four-year bond for a total of CHF 700 million issued by Novartis Securities Investment Ltd. and guaranteed by Novartis AG. The other was a 3.625% seven-year bond of CHF 800 million issued by Novartis AG.

Divestments/Discontinued Operations in 2007

Consumer Health—Gerber Business Unit

        On September 1, Novartis completed the divestment of the Gerber infant products Business Unit for approximately $5.5 billion to Nestlé S.A. resulting in a pre-tax divestment gain of approximately $4.0 billion and an after-tax gain of $3.6 billion.

Consumer Health—Medical Nutrition Business Unit

        On July 1, Novartis completed the divestment of the remainder of the Medical Nutrition Business Unit for approximately $2.5 billion to Nestlé S.A. resulting in a pre-tax divestment gain of $1.8 billion and an after-tax gain of $1.6 billion.

        Gerber and Medical Nutrition are reported as discontinued operations in all periods in the Group's consolidated financial statements. These businesses in total had 2007 net sales of $1.7 billion and operating income of $311 million before their respective divestment.

Other Significant Transactions in 2007

Vaccines and Diagnostics—Intercell

        On September 28, Novartis entered into a strategic alliance with Intercell AG, an Austrian biotechnology company focused on vaccines development. In accordance with the agreement, Novartis paid $383 million (EUR 270 million), and also recorded $207 million (EUR 146 million) of intangible assets and acquired an additional 4.8 million shares for $176 million (EUR 124 million) that increased the Novartis holding in Intercell to 15.9%. The equity investment is accounted for as an available-for-sale marketable security within the financial assets of the division.

Pharmaceuticals—Betaseron®

        On September 14, Novartis and Bayer Schering Pharma AG received regulatory approval to complete an agreement related to various rights for the multiple sclerosis treatment Betaseron® under an earlier agreement between Schering and Chiron Corporation transferred to Novartis in April 2006. Under the new agreement, Novartis received a one-time payment of $200 million, principally for manufacturing

97


Table of Contents


facilities transferred to Bayer Schering, as well as receiving rights to market a Novartis-branded version of Betaseron® called Extavia starting in 2009 in the EU and later in the US following anticipated approval. As a result of the clarification of the intangible product rights, a reassessment was made of the related assets from the Chiron acquisition as of April 20, 2006. This resulted in an increase of $235 million in identified net assets in 2007 relating to the Chiron 2006 acquisition.


CORE RESULTS AS DEFINED BY NOVARTIS

        The Group's operating income, net income and earnings per share from continuing operations have been significantly affected by acquisition-related factors, including the amortization of intangible assets, impairment charges, expenses relating to the integration of acquisitions as well as other items over a $25 million threshold that management deems exceptional.

        In order to improve transparency and better present the underlying performance of the business, Novartis decided in the fourth quarter of 2009 to introduce these core measures as an additional view of performance. Novartis believes that investor understanding of the Group's performance is enhanced by disclosing these performance measures.

        Novartis intends to use these core measures as important factors in assessing the Group's performance in conjunction with other performance metrics. The following are examples of how these core measures will be utilized:

        Despite the importance of these measures to management in setting goals and measuring the Group's performance, these are non-IFRS measures that have no standardized meaning prescribed by IFRS. As a result, they have limits in usefulness to investors. Because of their non-standardized definitions, the core measures (unlike IFRS measures) may not be comparable to the calculation of similar measures of other companies. These core measures are presented solely to permit investors to more fully understand how the Group's management assesses underlying performance. These core measures are not, and should not be viewed as, a substitute for IFRS measures.

        As an internal measure of Group performance, these core measures have limitations, and the performance management process is not solely restricted to these metrics. A limitation of the core measures is that they provide a view of the Group's operations without including all events during a period, such as the effects of an acquisition or amortization of purchased intangible assets.

98


Table of Contents

        The following tables reconcile IFRS results to core results:


2009, 2008 AND 2007 RECONCILIATION OF IFRS RESULTS TO CORE RESULTS

2009
  IFRS
results
  Amortization
of intangible
assets
(1)
  Impairments(2)   Acquisition-
related
restructuring
and
integration
items
(3)
  Exceptional
items
(4)
  Core
results
 
 
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
 

Net sales

    44,267                             44,267  

Other revenues

    836                       (28 )   808  

Cost of Goods Sold

    (12,179 )   938     (69 )   18           (11,292 )
                           

Gross profit

    32,924     938     (69 )   18     (28 )   33,783  

Marketing & Sales

    (12,050 )                           (12,050 )

Research & Development

    (7,469 )   87     95                 (7,287 )

General & Administration

    (2,281 )                           (2,281 )

Other income

    782                       (65 )   717  

Other expense

    (1,924 )         49           430     (1,445 )
                           

Operating income

    9,982     1,025     75     18     337     11,437  

Income from associated companies

    293     569     92           97     1,051  

Financial income

    198                             198  

Interest expense

    (551 )                           (551 )
                           

Income before taxes

    9,922     1,594     167     18     434     12,135  

Taxes

    (1,468 )                           (1,868) (5)
                                   

Net income

    8,454                             10,267  
                                   

Attributable to:

                                     

Shareholders of Novartis AG

    8,400                             10,213  

Non-controlling interests

    54                             54  

Average number of shares outstanding—Basic (million)

    2,267.9                             2,267.9  

Basic earnings per share ($)(6)

    3.70                             4.50  

Average number of shares outstanding—Diluted (million)

    2,276.6                             2,276.6  

Diluted earnings per share ($)(6)

    3.69                             4.49  

(1)
Amortization of intangible assets: Cost of Goods Sold includes recurring amortization of acquired rights to in-market products and other production-related intangible assets; R&D includes the recurring amortization of acquired rights for core technology platforms; Income from associated companies includes the recurring amortization of the purchase price allocation related to intangible assets, primarily for the Roche and Alcon investments.

(2)
Impairments: Cost of Goods Sold includes impairments of acquired rights to in-market products and other production-related impairment charges, including a partial reversal of $100 million in Pharmaceuticals for an impairment taken in 2007 for Famvir; R&D includes write-offs related to in-process R&D; Other expense includes impairments, primarily for financial assets; Income from associated companies reflects the $92 million impairment charge taken for an Alcon pharmaceutical development project.

99


Table of Contents

(3)
Acquisition-related restructuring and integration items: Cost of Goods Sold includes charges of $18 million related to the EBEWE Pharma specialty generics business acquisition.

(4)
Exceptional items: Other revenues reflects a $28 million gain from a settlement of Vaccines and Diagnostics; Other income reflects divestments gains in Pharmaceuticals; Other expense includes an increase of $345 million in legal provisions principally for the Trileptal and Tobi US government investigations; Income from associated companies reflects a $97 million one-time charge for the Novartis share of Roche's restructuring charges for Genentech.

(5)
Taxes on the adjustments between IFRS and core results take into account the tax rate applicable in the jurisdiction where the adjustment arises.

(6)
Earnings per share (EPS) is calculated on the amount of net income attributable to shareholders of Novartis AG.

100


Table of Contents

2008
  IFRS
results(1)
  Amortization
of intangible
assets(2)
  Impairments(3)   Acquisition-
related
restructuring
and
integration
items(4)
  Exceptional
items(5)
  Core
results
 
 
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
  ($ millions)
 

Net sales

    41,459                       (154 )   41,305  

Other revenues

    1,125                       (49 )   1,076  

Cost of Goods Sold

    (11,439 )   969     29                 (10,441 )
                             

Gross profit

    31,145     969     29           (203 )   31,940  

Marketing & Sales

    (11,852 )        <