2016年6月28日星期二

Hovid

© All rights reserved. 2016. The Edge Communications Sdn. Bhd. Best viewedwith Chrome, Firefox, Safari andIE9 and above. Home About Us Join Us Terms of use PDPA Contact Us Advertise with us FAQ Sitemap RSS Twitter Facebook Subscription WatchList Edition: International Malaysia Singapore Login | Register MOST VIEWED High-5: We had no choice but to close down MMC Corp, GENP, Ahmad Zaki Resources, SapuraKencana, Seremban Engineering AirAsia buys 80% stake in T&Co Coffee for RM914,000 Brexit headache to persist at Bursa, KLCI to trend lower Husni resigns, Johari takes over MORE ► EcoWorld sees ‘silver lining’ for ‘savvy investors’ in Brexit Eco Majestic’s Rumah Selangorku Open Day draws 500 interested buyers What is the impact of Brexit on M’sian property investors? Setia EcoHill 2 prospective buyers line up to book units A little passion goes a long way LATEST NEWS , CORPORATE FROM THE EDGE Hovid in ‘expansion mode’, to reap fruits of investments by FY18 By Supriya Surendran / The Edge Financial Daily | June 27, 2016 : 9:49 AM MYT This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, on June 27, 2016. KUALA LUMPUR: Ipoh-based pharmaceutical company Hovid Bhd is in “expansion mode” now. It is investing up to RM60 million for a new research and development (R&D) centre and to expand its manufacturing facility, after which it expects to reap the fruits of its investments by the financial year ending June 30, 2018 (FY18). It expects to spend RM15 million on the R&D plant, to be located in Bayan Lepas, Penang, and RM45 million on a pharma plant, which will be situated in Chemor, Perak, its home base, next to its existing pharma plant there. “We need to wait for approval from the National Pharmaceutical Control Bureau (NPCB) for licences for both our R&D centre and the [new] Chemor plant, which will take some time. Therefore, we expect to see revenue contribution from these new developments only in FY18,” Hovid chairman and managing director David Ho Sue San told The Edge Financial Daily in a recent interview. The R&D plant in Penang will conduct bioequivalence (BE) studies — the comparison of medicinal products containing the same active substance — which is expected to strengthen the group’s product portfolio. “We just finished building the centre in Penang. We aim to get the licence from the NPCB by next year. The approval takes around a year as the requirements are similar to that in applying for a hospital licence; we will need to employ doctors, nurses, and emergency medical personnel, just like a hospital. “Once we get the approvals, we can accelerate our product development,” said Ho. The group previously collaborated with hospitals for its BE studies, for which it used to take up some 40 beds. The lack of available hospital beds posed a problem for it at times. “Now, with our facility, we have our own beds —48 in total. We have been approached by other companies to conduct BE studies for them too, which we now have the capacity to do,” said Ho. Meanwhile, the group is also waiting for NPCB’s nod for the commencement of its new pharma plant, which is actually the phase 2 of its existing facility in Chemor. It hopes to secure the approval for the project in six months. “Although the new plant will make similar products — tablets and capsules for oral consumption — the difference will lie in the processes. It will be more automated, with higher technology applied,” said Ho. The expansion, split into phases 1 and 2, was primarily because the existing facility had reached its peak capacity, while orders piled up. Phase 1 began early this year. It expects to start work on Phase 2 by year end. When the plant is fully commissioned, Ho believes it will be able to handle the expected growth in orders for its tablets and capsules for the next three to five years. The new plant has also been designed to meet the pharmaceutical production standards of Europe, the US Food and Drug Administration (US FDA), and the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration. Hovid, which derives 55% of its revenue from the export markets, with Asia being its biggest outbound market, is pushing for more exports. But its plan to globally market its Tocovid Suprabio product, which is touted to be able to reduce the risk of a mini stroke, is yet to be realised, as the US FDA trials for the product are still ongoing and will need another two years before the results can be published, said Hovid chief financial officer Andrew Goh. For its nine months ended March 31, 2016, Hovid’s net profit fell 28.8% year-on-year to RM 11.68 million. Translated by Google Translator: Select Language ▼ Related Articles Corporate earnings consensus for Malaysia at 10%-11%, says Eastspring Investments Tuesday, 14 October 2014 Penang government says 1MDB has affected foreign investments into state Tuesday, 21 July 2015 #Flash* Tun Razak Exchange Lifestyle Quarter aims to lure RM3.2b foreign investments Wednesday, 25 June 2014 Malaysia posts modest growth in 1H investments Wednesday, 19 August 2015 Flash: Tun Razak Exchange Lifestyle Quarter aims to lure RM3.2b foreign investments Wednesday, 25 June 2014 #Flash* Malaysia nets RM136.9b in local & foreign investments in Jan-Sept 2013 Thursday, 12 December 2013 #Flash* Malaysia's Jan-Sept 2013 domestic investments rise 13% yoy Thursday, 12 December 2013 #Flash* Tun Razak Exchange Lifestyle Quarter aims to lure RM3.2b foreign investments Wednesday, 25 June 2014 Samudra eyes fresh investments Monday, 23 December 2013 SunCity to expand investments Monday, 13 September 2010 S’gor proposes RM50b investments Thursday, 05 March 2009 Penang eyes RM700m investments Wednesday, 17 June 2009 Tuesday, June 28 2016 28 → News Search HOME CORPORATE ENTERPRISE PERSONAL WEALTH THE EDGE TV OTHERS 新闻 THE EDGE PROPERTY

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