(Bloomberg) -- Insys Therapeutics Inc. shares plunged Monday on a warning that it may seek bankruptcy protection after bleeding tens of millions of dollars on legal settlements and defending former executives convicted of bribing doctors to prescribe the companyâs powerful opioid.
Insys said late Friday it has $87.6 million in cash and equivalents at the end of the first quarter, and $240.3 million in liabilities. It said it also may not be able to âcompleteâ a $150 million settlement with the U.S. Justice Department over illegal marketing of its Subsys drug.
âThese factors raise substantial doubt about the companyâs ability to continue as a going concern,â Insys said in a press release. The company said it may have to file for Chapter 11 protection, could liquidate its assets and that investors could lose all or part of their investments in the company.
The shares dropped 20% in early New York trading to $2.89 a share. Theyâre down more than 90% since their 2015 peak, when questions arose about the companyâs aggressive promotion of Subsys, a powerful opioid painkiller thatâs administered with a mouth spray.
The company didnât say when it might file for Chapter 11 protection, and thereâs no guarantee that it will. Jackie Marcus, an Insys spokeswoman, didnât respond to a phone call seeking comment after regular work hours Friday.
The announcement could mark the beginning of the end for the Chandler, Arizona-based drugmaker. Earlier this month, Insys founder John Kapoor and four ex-executives were convicted of engaging in a racketeering conspiracy to use a sham speakerâs program to bribe doctors into ramping up off-label Subsys prescriptions and then duping insurers into covering the shady scripts.
Criminal Case
Kapoor and the others -- who havenât yet been sentenced -- face a maximum of 20 years in prison each on the charges. With his conviction, the former billionaire becomes the first pharma CEO to face significant jail time in connection with allegations he helped fuel the U.S.âs current opioid epidemic.
Insys said in March that it had hired Lazard Ltd. to advise it on capital planning and the evaluation of strategic alternatives. The company said Friday that it will continue to look at strategic alternatives or selling assets.
In the filing, Insys warned investors that âthere are no assurances that the company will be successful in implementing a strategic plan for the sale of its assets in order to address its impending liquidity constraints.â
Insys agreed last year to pay $150 million to resolve the governmentâs civil and criminal probes into illegal marketing tactics used to lure doctors into writing more Subsys prescriptions. Under the deal, Insys was slated to pay the money over five years and meet other requirements.
The companyâs dwindling cash reserves, however, have raised doubt about whether Insys can complete the settlement.
Legal Costs
Insys is also paying legal-defense costs under an indemnity agreement, common at many large companies, requiring it to cover any investigation, defense, settlement or appeal-related expense for Kapoor and other former managers. Insys said last year Kapoorâs defense alone had cost the company $28 million so far.
In Fridayâs release, Insys officials said indemnity defense costs âincreased to $25.7 million for the first quarter of 2019, compared to $10.3 million in the first quarter of 2018.â That figure included more than $18 million Kapoorâs defense lawyers racked up preparing and putting on his defense during a two-month trial in Boston, the company said.
âManagement is disputing the reasonableness of certain indemnification-related expenses for this quarter and prior periods,â Insys said in the statement. Beth Wilkinson, Kapoorâs lead defense attorney in the Boston case, didnât immediately respond to phone and email messages seeking comment on the companyâs challenges to her clientâs legal bills.
The criminal case is U.S. v. Kapoor, 16-cr-10343, U.S. District Court, District of Massachusetts (Boston).
To contact the reporters on this story: Riley Griffin in New York at [email protected];Jef Feeley in Wilmington, Delaware at [email protected]
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Drew Armstrong at [email protected]
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