(Reuters) - Strong cash flow and growth will enable GlaxoSmithKline’s consumer products business to cope with a higher debt load after its planned separation next year, the division’s head of marketing told Reuters. Tamara Rogers, Chief Marketing Officer for GSK Consumer Healthcare, said in an interview for the Reuters Marketing Interactive Week that the business would take the increased debt in its stride because of its cash flow prospects. “As a consumer business we have a very good cash flow, so we’re expecting - with the growth rates that we are anticipating - to be able to manage that burden,” Rogers said. This would enable the division to “make the choices we want to make around where to play. We are in sectors that are very high growth,” Rogers added. GSK is due to update investors on plans to split into two listed groups, one for pharmaceuticals and vaccines and another for consumer remedies, on June 23. The consumer group has 10 billion pounds ($14.2 billion) in sales, about 30% of the group total, and as part of the separation slated for next year, GSK has said the unit will take on net debt worth 3.5 to 4 times its annual adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA). That is up from 2 times for all of GSK currently. The proceeds from recapitalising the consumer division will be paid out to help GSK’s remaining pharmaceuticals and vaccines business cut net debt to a ratio below 2, as well as to Pfizer, which owns 32% of the entity. Rogers said there was ample room for the consumer health business to grow from its number one position in the industry. Though ahead of Johnson & Johnson J&J, Sanofi and Bayer, it only commands a share of about 7% in the global market for over-the-counter remedies and vitamins. For now, the group will focus on opportunities to grow in its established categories including oral care, pain killers as well as sprays and creams for allergy relief, both organically and via takeovers. “It’s a market that is more fragmented and we believe there is plenty of headroom for growth in the categories that we already play in,” Rogers said. “We are always looking at M&A opportunities but they have to be ones that are going to really align, augment and have a really strong fit with our business,” said Rogers.Its vitamins and minerals for preventative healthcare, such as the Centrum brand, have seen a surge in demand during the coronavirus pandemic and Rogers said she expects preventative care to become an enduring trend even as COVID-19 cases drop. For more on the Reuters Marketing Interactive Week please click here: here ($1 = 0.7068 pounds) Reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Alexander Smith Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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