Mylan NV, the generic drugmaker, is acting like two companies: One has problems with a takeover offer that's below $100 a share. The other would be delighted with a share price of $73.33. Mylan is on the offensive against Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, the Israeli rival that's been bidding for it. In a letter this week, the company said Teva's opening offer of $82 a share, "grossly undervalues" it and the buyer shouldn't even bother coming back until it's prepared to pay "significantly in excess of $100 per share."
Elsewhere, the company has put a very different price on itself. Mylan outlined a performance-based incentive plan for executives, which includes a $73.33 price target that was reiterated in a 10-K filing this week. Reaching such a price by the end of 2018 would represent an "extraordinary achievement by our leadership team in such a short period of time," the company said.
The disconnect is explained in part by Mylan's determination to rebuff Teva. In its eight-page missive, it accuses Teva of ineptitude, laziness, disingenuousness and bumbling racism.
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Mylan's two valuations come from either side of the Atlantic. The letter to Teva was sent from the company's tax headquarters in the English town of Potters Bar. The 10-K was filed from Canonsburg, Pennsylvania - where the company employs workers and produces drugs.
Perhaps that's another explanation for the split. The strain of having to manage a long-distance relationship with itself may have gotten to Mylan, causing a cognitive dissonance whereby it's simultaneously entertaining the ideas that, if it totally crushes it, it should be worth $73.33 a share, and any one who thinks it is worth as little as $82 a share is clinically moronic.

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