US policies aimed at lowering prescription drug prices are forcing Swiss pharmaceutical companies like Novartis and Roche to reassess their European strategies. Companies are signing 'Most Favoured Nation' deals to align prices, which could reshape investment and innovation in Switzerland's vital pharma sector.

"US politics are now dictating domestic health policy in other countries."
"I took prescription drugs, a very big part of health care, from the highest price in the entire world to the lowest."
The protectionist threat that once existed only on paper has slammed into the Swiss economy with the force of an earthquake. As the first anniversary of President Trumpâs 'Most Favoured Nation' (MFN) executive order arrives this March 2026, the era of diplomatic negotiation is over. The US government has effectively weaponized its market dominance, forcing pharmaceutical giants to choose: align your prices or lose access to the world's most lucrative consumer base.
Swiss industry titans Novartis and Rocheâthrough its US arm Genentechâare among the 16 major companies that have capitulated, signing confidential deals to secure a three-year exemption from crippling tariffs. These are not gentleman's agreements; they are survival tactics. The launch of the TrumpRx.gov platform in February has further raised the stakes, creating a public pillory where companies are excluded if they fail to match the lowest global reference prices. For Swiss pharma, the message from Washington is deafeningly clear: play by American rules, or don't play at all.
Money talks, and right now it is screaming across the Atlantic. In a staggering display of capital flight, pharmaceutical companies have committed to investing over $320 billion (CHF 250 billion) directly into US research and manufacturing over the last year. This is a direct response to the MFN deals, which mandate increased US investment as a condition for market access.
While this secures a foothold in the US, it poses an existential question for Switzerland's industrial base. The US market already accounts for at least 50% of revenue for most large pharma firms. By tethering future investment to US soil, companies are effectively reshaping their global supply chains to appease Washington. The 'Swiss Made' label, a hallmark of quality and innovation, risks being overshadowed as the center of gravity shifts decisively westward.
Europe is bracing for a harsh pharmaceutical winter. Experts are warning that the continent is becoming collateral damage in America's price war. "US politics are now dictating domestic health policy in other countries," asserts James Whitehouse of Lightning Health. The implications are critical: rather than lower US prices to European levels, companies are threatening to delay or cancel drug launches in Europe entirely.
The logic is brutal but sound. Why launch a drug in a lower-priced European market if that low price becomes the global benchmark that guts your revenue in the United States? Companies are choosing to sacrifice European market share to protect their American margins. This creates a dangerous scenario where Swiss and European patients may face delayed access to life-saving innovations, as R&D budgets and product launches are prioritized for the high-paying American consumer.
The financial forecast for Swiss pharma is turning stormy. Analysts at UBS have sounded the alarm, predicting a potential 8% hit to net profits for major firms by 2028. This projection is based on the pricing pressures applied to top-selling drugs under the new Medicare models. With US prices historically sitting at four times the level of other industrialized nations, any forced compression of this margin cuts deep.
This is not just a dip in a quarterly report; it is a structural shock to the business model that has sustained Swiss prosperity for decades. If the US government succeeds in permanently anchoring prices to lower international benchmarks, the days of runaway margins on branded products are numbered. Novartis and Roche are financially robust, but they are now navigating a minefield where their most profitable market is actively hostile to their traditional pricing strategies.
Despite the White House's victory lap, the numbers tell a more complex story. President Trump claims to have delivered the "lowest prices in the entire world," but a rigorous investigation by The New York Times and German media exposes significant cracks in this narrative. While the TrumpRx website touts deals on select medications, the reality is that patent-protected drugs remain consistently cheaper in Germany.
For blockbuster weight-loss drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound, Americans are still paying nearly double what patients in other wealthy nations pay. The administration has narrowed the gap, but they haven't closed it. This discrepancy reveals that while the political pressure is real, the economic reality is stubborn. However, for Swiss pharma, the "truth" matters less than the policy direction. Whether the prices are truly the lowest or just lower, the pressure on their bottom line remains relentless.