Roche CEO Proposes Direct Drug Sales to Cut US Prices
Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche suggests eliminating intermediaries could halve US drug prices, marking significant shift in international healthcare pricing strategy.
Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche suggests eliminating intermediaries could halve US drug prices, marking significant shift in international healthcare pricing strategy.

"So if the US would like to cut prices by 50%, it’s very easy. We go direct."
"We hope that the US government, then also sees... that the companies are intending to produce the medicines that are needed in the US, for the US."
Roche is ready to slash US drug prices in half, but there is a catch: the middlemen must go. In a bold move that challenges the entrenched US healthcare hierarchy, Roche CEO Thomas Schinecker has declared it "very easy" to cut costs by 50% if the company is permitted to sell directly to patients. This is not merely a suggestion; it is an active negotiation with the US government designed to bypass the complex web of intermediaries that currently strangle the market.
The proposal comes at a critical juncture. The Swiss pharmaceutical titan is maneuvering aggressively to preempt President Donald Trump's proposed reforms, which threaten to upend the industry's pricing models. By offering a direct-to-consumer pipeline, Roche is effectively calling the US government's bluff on cost reduction. Schinecker's assertion is clear: the inflated costs are not a product of Swiss manufacturing, but of a bloated American supply chain. If Washington wants affordable care, Roche is prepared to deliver it immediately—provided the red tape is cut alongside the prices.
The true culprits of skyrocketing prices are the Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), who siphon off half of all earnings in the supply chain while taking absolutely "zero risk" on innovation. Schinecker's condemnation of these intermediaries is scathing and precise. These entities, which control the formularies determining which drugs receive insurance reimbursement, have long been the invisible hand pushing prices upward. Roche contends that while it pours billions into high-stakes R&D, PBMs simply collect a toll.
This structural inefficiency creates a massive distortion in the market. The industry has long argued that high list prices are a necessity to accommodate the deep rebates demanded by these gatekeepers. By exposing the PBMs' parasitic role, Roche is shifting the narrative from "greedy pharma" to a broken system. The message to the US administration is stark: eliminate the rent-seekers who contribute nothing to medical advancement, and the savings will flow directly to the American consumer.
The urgency of Roche's proposal is driven by a looming threat: President Trump's suggestion of levying tariffs of up to 200% on the pharmaceutical sector. This potential trade war weapon is coupled with an executive order proposing a "Most Favoured Nation" policy, demanding the US receive the lowest price offered to comparable wealthy nations. The stakes are incredibly high, as drugs in the US are currently a staggering 2.3 times more expensive than in 32 other OECD countries.
This price disparity makes the US market the most lucrative yet vulnerable target for regulatory crackdowns. If the "Most Favoured Nation" policy is implemented, it would deliver a catastrophic hit to revenue in the industry's largest market. Roche's preemptive strike—offering a voluntary 50% cut through direct sales—is a calculated diplomatic play. It aims to satisfy the administration's demand for lower prices without succumbing to the blunt instrument of tariffs or external price controls that could stifle future growth.
Despite the geopolitical headwinds, Roche remains a financial fortress, reporting first-half sales of CHF 30.9 billion, a robust 7% increase. The company is not negotiating from a position of weakness but from one of strategic entrenchment. To further insulate itself from protectionist policies, Roche announced plans in April to invest a massive $50 billion in US manufacturing and R&D. This is a clear signal: Roche is "intending to produce the medicines that are needed in the US, for the US."
This multi-billion dollar commitment serves as both a carrot and a shield. By localizing production and moving inventories stateside, Roche is effectively daring the administration to tariff a company that is a major domestic investor. With core earnings beating analyst estimates, the Swiss giant is proving it has the capital to weather the storm and the strategic foresight to rewrite the rules of the American healthcare game.