Friday, October 31, 2025

Factbox-Global drugmakers rush to boost US presence as tariff threat looms

(Reuters) -Global drugmakers are scrambling to shore up their U.S. manufacturing capacity and domestic inventory as the Trump administration weighs hefty tariffs on pharmaceutical imports into the country.

Companies with more exposure to the UK, the EU, South Korea and Japan are likely on better footing as these countries have secured favorable agreements capping tariffs at around 15%.

But with many countries still engaged in trade talks with the U.S., businesses around the world are hedging their decisions pending more clarity on final tariff rates.

Here’s what drugmakers are doing to mitigate supply-chain risks and reassure investors:

Eli Lilly

The U.S. drugmaker plans to invest $27 billion to build four new manufacturing facilities over the next five years in the U.S. It aims to announce two of its new site locations this quarter.

Johnson & Johnson

The drugmaker plans to raise U.S. investments by 25%, totaling $55 billion, over the next four years. It plans to build four plants, including one at Wilson, North Carolina, and another at Tokyo-based Fujifilm Biotechnologies’ manufacturing site in Holly Springs, North Carolina, over the next 10 years.

Locations for the other plants remain undisclosed.

Roche

The Swiss drugmaker said in April it will invest $50 billion in the U.S. over the next five years.

A month later, it announced an additional $550 million investment to expand its Indianapolis diagnostics manufacturing hub. The expansion will span Indiana, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and California, creating more than 12,000 jobs.

Roche said in May it plans to invest more than $700 million in a new drug manufacturing facility in Holly Springs, North Carolina.

CEO Thomas Schinecker said in July the company had moved around inventories and ramped up production of all the medicines that it already produced in the U.S. in anticipation of tariffs.

AstraZeneca

The Anglo-Swedish drugmaker will invest $50 billion on U.S. manufacturing by 2030. The investment will fund a new drug substance facility in Virginia, its largest single-site global investment, alongside expansions in Maryland, Massachusetts, California, Indiana and Texas.

It has already started technology transfers and is managing inventory in 2025 to minimize any tariff hit. Company executives have said the impact would be “very short-lived.”

Novartis

The Swiss drugmaker plans to spend $23 billion to build and expand 10 facilities in the U.S. over the next five years. This includes building six new manufacturing plants and expanding its San Diego research and development site, which is expected to create more than 1,000 jobs.

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