German chemicals and pharmaceuticals giant Bayer said on Monday that it had agreed to sell over-the-counter foot care brand Dr Scholl's to US-based Yellow Wood Partners. The Boston private equity firm will pay $585 million (521 million euros) for the business, which generated $234 million in revenues last year, Bayer said in a statement.
"We look forward to seeing the brand taken to the next level of success under Yellow Wood's ownership," board member Heiko Schipper said, praising its "exciting pipeline of innovative products". Bayer is selling off chunks of its over-the-counter medicines division, known as Consumer Health, as it struggles with ebbing revenues and profits.
The unit includes household-name brands like painkiller Aspirin and indigestion treatment Alka-Seltzer. After taking over US seeds and pesticides giant Monsanto for $63 billion last year, the Leverkusen-based group is reorganising itself around its core businesses and biggest earners in agrichemicals and prescription pharmaceuticals.
Meanwhile it is busy battling thousands of US lawsuits over flagship Monsanto herbicides containing chemical glyphosate, which plaintiffs argue caused them to develop cancer after years of use. Last week, a judge slashed damages awarded by a jury to one claimant, Edwin Hardeman, from $75 million to $20 million - while continuing to highlight "reprehensible" conduct by Monsanto. Such wider concerns, with potential costs for the group running into the billions, left the Bayer share price little moved by Monday's announcement.
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