Andreas Strüngmann

Andreas Strüngmann (born 1950) is a German businessman who founded generic drug maker Hexal AG ($1.6 billion sales during 2004) in 1986. It became Germany's second-largest generic drug producer.[1] In February 2005, he and his brother Thomas sold Hexal and their 67.7% of U.S. Eon Labs to Novartis for $7.5 billion,[2] making its subsidiary Sandoz the largest generic-drug company in the world.

Andreas Strüngmann
Born1950 (age 7273)
OccupationEntrepreneur
Known forCo-founder of Hexal

He currently has residences in Tegernsee and South Africa and is married with two children. At age 56, he accepted an executive position at Sandoz, a generics division of Novartis.

See also

References

  1. Timmons, Heather & Wright, Tom. "Novartis to Buy Two Makers of Generics". The New York Times, 22 February 2005. Retrieved on 27 May 2013.
  2. Forbes. "Andreas Strungmann - Forbes". March 2013. Retrieved on 27 May 2013.
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