Business | An American in Leverkusen

Shareholders have high hopes for Bayer’s new boss

Bill Anderson has two qualifications for the job. He knows pharma. And he is American

William “Bill” Anderson, chief executive officer of Roche Pharmaceuticals, speaks during an interview on the sidelines of the 38th Annual JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco, California, U.S. January 13, 2020. REUTERS/Stephen Lam - RC2DFE9YRS64
Bayer’s transatlantic betImage: Reuters
|BERLIN

After Bill Anderson, Bayer’s new boss, arrives on April 1st at the firm’s headquarters in Leverkusen, Werner Baumann, the German drug-and-chemicals giant’s outgoing chief executive, will be on standby for two months to ensure a smooth transition. Given Mr Anderson’s lack of experience in crop sciences, Bayer’s biggest business, you might ask what the board was thinking handing him the reins. The answer is that he has two qualifications that make up for his shortcoming. He used to run the pharmaceuticals business at Roche, a Swiss drug behemoth. And he is American. That makes him just the man for a company that is betting big on its pharma business across the Atlantic.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “An American in Leverkusen”

From the March 18th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

How Trump’s tariffs could crush American carmakers

They must hope the levies do not endure

A squirel in a suit sitting at a desk in front of a computer

The Economist’s office agony uncle is back

Another bulging postbag for Max Flannel


The illustration depicts a surreal figure with a head resembling the Belgian flag, balancing a cityscape on a tray in one hand and holding a car in the other. The figure's body is dressed like a performer, and two smoking exhaust pipes protrude from the ba

The smiling new face of German big business

From Allianz to Zalando, pedlars of services are outdoing industrial firms at home—and foreign rivals abroad


Airbus has not taken full advantage of Boeing’s weakness

That could leave a gap for other planemakers to fill

Zyn is giving investors a buzz—for now

Nicotine pouches are growing fast