Mylan (MYL) to Pay $465M to Settle EpiPen Medicaid Rebate Classification; Lowers FY16 Outlook
- Stocks gear up for Big Tech earnings; yen toys with danger zone
- JPMorgan is worried about further S&P 500 sell-off potential
- Oil rises on robust EU data as Mideast tensions linger
- China acquired top-end Nvidia AI chips despite recent US ban- Reuters
- SAP Q1 results fall short of Wall Street estimates as transformation kicks off
- Fisker (FSR) Appoints Michael Healy as Chief Restructuring Officer
- Kroger (KR), Albertsons and C&S Wholesale Grocers Announce an Updated and Expanded Divestiture Plan
- Costar Group (CSGP) to Acquire Matterport (MTTR) for $5.50/sh Cash and Stock
- Jaguar Health (JAGX) Files $75M Mixed Shelf
- Apple (AAPL) PT Lowered to $210 at Morgan Stanley, 'We'd buy post-earnings weakness'
- After-hours movers: Cadence Design Systems, Cleveland-Cliffs, Riot Platforms, and more
- Midday movers: Tesla, Li Auto and CNH Industrial fall; Salesforce rises
- Midday movers: Netflix, Super Micro fall; Paramount Global gains
- After-hours movers: Netflix, Intuitive Surgical, Nordstrom, KB Home
- Midday movers: Tesla, Blackstone, Las Vegas Sands fall; DR Horton rises
Mylan Agrees to Settlement on Medicaid Rebate Classification for EpiPenĀ® Auto-Injector
October 7, 2016 4:45 PM EDTWASHINGTON, Oct. 7, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- Mylan N.V. (NASDAQ, TASE: MYL) today announced that its subsidiary, Mylan Inc., has agreed to the terms of a $465 million settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice ("DOJ") and other government agencies that will resolve questions that have been raised about the classification of EpiPen® Auto-Injector and EpiPen Jr® Auto-Injector (collectively, "EpiPen Auto-Injector") for purposes of the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program.
The terms of the settlement do not... More