According to the lawsuit, defendants provided investors with material information concerning the failed inspection of Viatris’ Indore, India facility. Defendants’ statements, albeit made months after the initial inspection and defendants’ initiation of remediation efforts included, among other things, the disclosure of the FDA’s issuance of a warning letter and import alert which would prevent Viatris from shipping eleven products from the Indore facility, though four of such were exempt from the limitations (the “Warning Letter”). Defendants routinely referred to the impact of the Warning Letter as a mere “minor headwind” for Viatris.
Further, defendants provided these disclosures to investors while, at the same time, disseminating materially false and misleading statements and/or concealing material adverse facts concerning the true state impact of the Warning Letter on Viatris’ financials. Notably, defendants did not disclose precisely when the inspection occurred, how long the remediation efforts had been implemented, or the financial impact of the existing and continued remediation efforts. Defendants further notably failed to disclose which products were subject to the FDA Warning Letter, which products were subject to exemptions, and the significance of the restricted products with respect to Viatris’ existing financials and future projections, and for which Viatris believed it would obtain exemptions. Such statements, absent these material facts, caused Plaintiff and other shareholders to purchase Viatris’ securities at artificially inflated prices.
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