<p> British drugs giant GlaxoSmithKline on Monday demerges its newly-named consumer healthcare unit Haleon, resulting in what is set to be London's largest new stock market listing in more than a decade.</p>.<p>The new company -- owning brands including Sensodyne toothpaste, pain relief drug Panadol and cold treatment Theraflu -- is set for a valuation of about £40 billion ($47.4 billion) when it begins trading on the London stock market, according to Bloomberg.</p>.<p>The major strategy shift by GSK chief executive Emma Walmsley comes after she has faced intense activist shareholder pressure over the company's delays in producing Covid jabs and treatments.</p>.<p>"This will be the largest London stock market listing in a decade, with the new company becoming a big beast with a new skin in the consumer goods world," said Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/britains-drugmaker-gsk-buys-us-vaccine-firm-affinivax-in-33-billion-deal-1114023.html" target="_blank">Britain's drugmaker GSK buys US vaccine firm Affinivax in $3.3-billion deal</a></strong><br /> </p>.<p>It is set to be the capital's biggest listing since Swiss mining giant Glencore was valued at £38 billion on entry in 2011.</p>.<p>GSK, which owns 68 percent of Haleon, plans to retain six percent of the group following the spin-off.</p>.<p>US pharmaceutical titan Pfizer has said it plans to sell its 32-percent minority stake.</p>.<p>Walmsley, who had led the consumer unit prior to her promotion as head of GSK in 2017, has described the demerger as the group's most significant corporate change in 20 years.</p>.<p>The split sees GSK "parcelling off a considerable quantity of its sizeable debt pile into Haleon, expected to be around £10 billion", Streeter said.</p>.<p>Haleon could join London's top-tier FTSE 100 depending on its market valuation.</p>.<p>Walmsley, part of a group of less than 10 women chief executives running companies on the benchmark index, sees more long-term value in the demerger than a sale.</p>.<p>GSK at the start of the year rejected a £50 billion bid for the unit from consumer goods titan Unilever.</p>.<p>Alongside the demerger, GSK is expanding further into the field of vaccines, having in May snapped up US biopharmaceutical firm Affinivax for up to $3.3 billion.</p>.<p>Also this year, the British company spent $1.9 billion on US group Sierra Oncology, a specialist in medicines for rare forms of cancer.</p>.<p>Keith Bowman, analyst at Interactive Investor, said the demerger was aimed at giving GSK "increased management focus to each respective business".</p>.<p>This was the case "particularly for its pharma business which has underperformed rivals such as (Covid vaccine-maker) AstraZeneca over recent years", he told AFP.</p>.<p>GSK is set to receive £7 billion in dividends at separation.</p>.<p>The consumer healthcare division, whose portfolio of products includes also Centrum multivitamins and anti-inflammatory Voltaren, generates annual sales of about £10 billion.</p>.<p>Haleon will be headquartered in Weybridge, southwest of London.</p>.<p>"The idea is that a more focused consumer business will help boost sales," said Streeter.</p>.<p>"There will be no change at the top... which is a vote of confidence in Brian McNamara, a former Procter & Gamble executive who has led the division for eight years," she added. </p>
<p> British drugs giant GlaxoSmithKline on Monday demerges its newly-named consumer healthcare unit Haleon, resulting in what is set to be London's largest new stock market listing in more than a decade.</p>.<p>The new company -- owning brands including Sensodyne toothpaste, pain relief drug Panadol and cold treatment Theraflu -- is set for a valuation of about £40 billion ($47.4 billion) when it begins trading on the London stock market, according to Bloomberg.</p>.<p>The major strategy shift by GSK chief executive Emma Walmsley comes after she has faced intense activist shareholder pressure over the company's delays in producing Covid jabs and treatments.</p>.<p>"This will be the largest London stock market listing in a decade, with the new company becoming a big beast with a new skin in the consumer goods world," said Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/britains-drugmaker-gsk-buys-us-vaccine-firm-affinivax-in-33-billion-deal-1114023.html" target="_blank">Britain's drugmaker GSK buys US vaccine firm Affinivax in $3.3-billion deal</a></strong><br /> </p>.<p>It is set to be the capital's biggest listing since Swiss mining giant Glencore was valued at £38 billion on entry in 2011.</p>.<p>GSK, which owns 68 percent of Haleon, plans to retain six percent of the group following the spin-off.</p>.<p>US pharmaceutical titan Pfizer has said it plans to sell its 32-percent minority stake.</p>.<p>Walmsley, who had led the consumer unit prior to her promotion as head of GSK in 2017, has described the demerger as the group's most significant corporate change in 20 years.</p>.<p>The split sees GSK "parcelling off a considerable quantity of its sizeable debt pile into Haleon, expected to be around £10 billion", Streeter said.</p>.<p>Haleon could join London's top-tier FTSE 100 depending on its market valuation.</p>.<p>Walmsley, part of a group of less than 10 women chief executives running companies on the benchmark index, sees more long-term value in the demerger than a sale.</p>.<p>GSK at the start of the year rejected a £50 billion bid for the unit from consumer goods titan Unilever.</p>.<p>Alongside the demerger, GSK is expanding further into the field of vaccines, having in May snapped up US biopharmaceutical firm Affinivax for up to $3.3 billion.</p>.<p>Also this year, the British company spent $1.9 billion on US group Sierra Oncology, a specialist in medicines for rare forms of cancer.</p>.<p>Keith Bowman, analyst at Interactive Investor, said the demerger was aimed at giving GSK "increased management focus to each respective business".</p>.<p>This was the case "particularly for its pharma business which has underperformed rivals such as (Covid vaccine-maker) AstraZeneca over recent years", he told AFP.</p>.<p>GSK is set to receive £7 billion in dividends at separation.</p>.<p>The consumer healthcare division, whose portfolio of products includes also Centrum multivitamins and anti-inflammatory Voltaren, generates annual sales of about £10 billion.</p>.<p>Haleon will be headquartered in Weybridge, southwest of London.</p>.<p>"The idea is that a more focused consumer business will help boost sales," said Streeter.</p>.<p>"There will be no change at the top... which is a vote of confidence in Brian McNamara, a former Procter & Gamble executive who has led the division for eight years," she added. </p>