Anabelle Colaco
23 Dec 2025, 14:57 GMT+10
WASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled agreements with nine major pharmaceutical companies to lower the prices of medicines sold to the Medicaid program. To some cash-paying patients, a move the White House says will bring U.S. drug costs closer to those in other wealthy nations.
The companies signing the deals include Bristol Myers Squibb, Gilead Sciences, Merck, and Roche's U.S. unit Genentech, as well as Novartis, Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Sanofi, and GSK.
"We were subsidizing the entire world. We're not doing it anymore," Trump said at a White House press conference, flanked by senior executives from the participating drugmakers.
U.S. patients pay the highest prescription drug prices globally, often nearly three times more than consumers in other developed countries. Trump has repeatedly pressured pharmaceutical companies to cut prices and align them with international levels.
Despite the announcement, shares of most participating drugmakers rose between 1 percent and 3 percent. Investors appeared to focus on the removal of Trump's threat to impose tariffs for three years and downplayed the impact of price cuts that the White House said could reach as much as 70 percent off list prices. Analysts noted that companies already offer significant rebates, with Medicaid discounts exceeding 80 percent in some cases.
"These deals reaffirm that the pharma leaders have taken this opportunity to collaborate with this administration to deliver headlines and minimize any step-change in company economics from these deals," Bernstein analyst Courtney Breen said, adding that Gilead is likely the largest beneficiary due to its exposure to Medicaid.
Mehmet Oz, director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said Regeneron, Johnson & Johnson, and AbbVie would visit the White House after the holidays to launch the TrumpRx website. All three companies confirmed they were in discussions with the administration.
Under the agreements, drugmakers will cut prices on most medicines sold through Medicaid, with officials promising "massive savings" on widely used drugs. The deals also include lower direct-to-consumer prices for select medicines sold through TrumpRx.gov and other platforms, commitments to launch new U.S. drugs at prices equal to those in other wealthy countries, and pledges to expand manufacturing. In return, companies receive a three-year exemption from tariffs.
Most insured Americans pay fixed co-pays or co-insurance tied to list prices and may not benefit directly from TrumpRx, which directs cash-paying consumers to manufacturers' websites.
Merck said it will sell its diabetes drugs Januvia, Janumet, and Janumet XR directly to U.S. consumers at about 70 percent off list prices, and would offer its experimental cholesterol drug enlicitide through direct-to-consumer channels if approved. An executive from Bristol Myers said the company would provide its blood thinner, Eliquis, to Medicaid at no cost.
Amgen said it will offer Aimovig and Amjevita at US$299 a month through its direct-to-patient program, while Sanofi said its TrumpRx offerings would deliver average savings of about 70 percent.
Drugmakers also committed to "most-favored-nation" pricing for new U.S. launches across commercial, government, and cash-pay markets, including Medicare. Officials said the companies pledged more than $150 billion in U.S. investment for research, development, and manufacturing, with Merck contributing $70 billion, and some agreed to donate drug ingredients to the U.S. strategic reserve.
Get a daily dose of Arizona Herald news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Arizona Herald.
More InformationWASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled agreements with nine major pharmaceutical companies to lower the prices of medicines...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stocks rose on Monday as investors and traders once again weighed into technology shares. Trading will be...
NEW DELHI, India: After two days of heated debates in India's Parliament, lawmakers approved by a voice vote on December 18, new legislation...
LONDON, U.K.: Fast-fashion retailer Zara has begun using artificial intelligence to digitally generate new images of real-life models...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: After years of political brinkmanship and legal uncertainty, TikTok's Chinese parent ByteDance has signed binding...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: A cryptocurrency company that had been investigated for more than a year by the Joe Biden administration is now working...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The head of the U.S. agency charged with enforcing workplace civil rights has drawn sharp attention after publicly...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. President Donald Trump ordered a significant shift in federal marijuana policy, directing regulators to ease...
The United States is in the grip of a reading recession—nearly half of Americans didn't read a single book in 2023, and fewer than...
(Photo credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn Images) Freshman phenom Caleb Wilson scored 21 points to tie a 50-year-old North Carolina record...
(Photo credit: Aryanna Frank-Imagn Images) Brayden Burries had 20 points to lead a balanced scoring effort for No. 1 Arizona, which...
(Photo credit: Allan Henry-Imagn Images) Western Conference rivals clash for the third time this month when Phoenix hosts the Los...
