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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Giovanni Caforio
| name = Giovanni Caforio
| birth_date = 1964
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1964}}
| nationality = Italian, American
| nationality = Italian, American
| occupation = Pharmaceutical executive
| occupation = Pharmaceutical executive
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'''Giovanni Caforio''' (born 1964) is an Italian-American pharmaceutical executive who served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of [[Bristol-Myers Squibb]] (BMS), one of the world's largest biopharmaceutical companies. During his tenure as CEO, which began in 2015 and ended on November 1, 2023, Caforio oversaw a period of significant strategic transformation at BMS, including the landmark $74 billion acquisition of [[Celgene]] in 2019 — one of the largest mergers in pharmaceutical industry history.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair">{{cite news |date=April 23, 2024 |title=Novartis nominates former Bristol Myers CEO Giovanni Caforio as its new chair. Will M&A deals follow? |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/novartis-nominates-former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-its-new-chair-large-ma-next-0 |work=Fierce Pharma |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> With an international career in the healthcare industry spanning more than 35 years, Caforio holds a Doctor of Medicine degree and has occupied senior leadership positions across multiple global pharmaceutical organizations.<ref name="novartis-bio">{{cite web |title=Giovanni Caforio, M.D. |url=https://www.novartis.com/about/board-directors/giovanni-caforio |publisher=Novartis |date=March 7, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Following his retirement from BMS, Caforio was nominated and subsequently elected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of [[Novartis]], the Swiss multinational pharmaceutical company, a position he assumed in 2024 and was re-elected to in 2025.<ref name="novartis-agm">{{cite web |title=Novartis shareholders approve all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors at the 2025 Annual General Meeting |url=https://www.novartis.com/news/media-releases/novartis-shareholders-approve-all-resolutions-proposed-board-directors-2025-annual-general-meeting |publisher=Novartis |date=March 7, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Giovanni Caforio''' (born 1964) is an Italian-American pharmaceutical executive who served as [[Chairman]] and [[Chief Executive Officer]] of [[Bristol-Myers Squibb]] (BMS), one of the world's largest biopharmaceutical companies. Over the course of a career spanning more than 35 years in the global healthcare industry, Caforio rose through successive leadership roles at BMS before assuming the position of CEO, a role he held until his retirement on November 1, 2023.<ref name="bms-transition">{{cite web |title=Bristol Myers Squibb Announces Leadership Transition Plan |url=https://news.bms.com/news/details/2023/Bristol-Myers-Squibb-Announces-Leadership-Transition-Plan/default.aspx |publisher=Bristol Myers Squibb |date=April 26, 2023 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> During his tenure as CEO, he oversaw one of the pharmaceutical industry's largest mergers and acquisitions, the $74 billion acquisition of [[Celgene]] in 2019, a deal that significantly reshaped BMS's portfolio and competitive position in oncology and immunology.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair">{{cite news |title=Novartis nominates former Bristol Myers CEO Giovanni Caforio as its new chair. Will M&A deals follow? |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/novartis-nominates-former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-its-new-chair-large-ma-next-0 |work=Fierce Pharma |date=April 23, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Following his departure from BMS, Caforio was nominated and subsequently elected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of [[Novartis]], the Swiss multinational pharmaceutical company, a position confirmed by shareholders in 2025.<ref name="novartis-agm-2025">{{cite web |title=Novartis shareholders approve all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors at the 2025 Annual General Meeting |url=https://www.novartis.com/news/media-releases/novartis-shareholders-approve-all-resolutions-proposed-board-directors-2025-annual-general-meeting |publisher=Novartis |date=March 7, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Giovanni Caforio was born in 1964 and holds both Italian and American nationality.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> Details regarding his upbringing and family background are not extensively documented in public sources. He pursued medical training, earning a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree, which provided him with a clinical foundation that would inform his subsequent career in the pharmaceutical industry.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> His medical background distinguished him among pharmaceutical executives, many of whom come from business or scientific research backgrounds rather than clinical medicine.
Giovanni Caforio was born in 1964 in Italy.<ref name="novartis-bio">{{cite web |title=Giovanni Caforio, M.D. |url=https://www.novartis.com/about/board-directors/giovanni-caforio |publisher=Novartis |date=March 7, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> He holds both Italian and American nationality.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> Details regarding his early childhood, family background, and upbringing have not been widely documented in public sources.


== Career ==
== Education ==


=== Early Career in Pharmaceuticals ===
Caforio holds a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree, a credential that has been consistently referenced in his professional titles throughout his career in the pharmaceutical industry.<ref name="bms-transition" /><ref name="novartis-bio" /> The specific institution from which he obtained his medical degree has not been confirmed in available sources.


Caforio built an international career in the healthcare industry that spans more than 35 years.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> Prior to joining Bristol-Myers Squibb, he held various positions in the global pharmaceutical sector, accumulating experience across different markets and therapeutic areas. His medical training provided him with a distinctive perspective on drug development and commercialization that would prove central to his leadership approach in later years.
== Career ==
 
=== Bristol-Myers Squibb ===
 
==== Rise to CEO ====


Giovanni Caforio rose through the ranks at Bristol-Myers Squibb, one of the largest biopharmaceutical companies in the world, ultimately being named Chief Executive Officer in 2015. He also served as Chairman of the Board, holding both the CEO and Chairman titles concurrently during the latter portion of his tenure at the company.<ref name="bms-transition">{{cite news |date=April 26, 2023 |title=Bristol Myers Squibb Announces Leadership Transition Plan |url=https://news.bms.com/news/details/2023/Bristol-Myers-Squibb-Announces-Leadership-Transition-Plan/default.aspx |work=Bristol Myers Squibb |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Giovanni Caforio's career in the healthcare industry has spanned more than 35 years, during which he has held leadership positions at major pharmaceutical companies.<ref name="novartis-bio" />


==== Strategic Transformation and the Celgene Acquisition ====
=== Rise at Bristol-Myers Squibb ===


Caforio's tenure at BMS was defined by a series of strategic decisions that reshaped the company's portfolio and competitive position within the pharmaceutical industry. The most notable of these was the acquisition of Celgene Corporation, which was completed in 2019 for approximately $74 billion. The deal was one of the largest mergers and acquisitions in the history of the pharmaceutical industry and fundamentally altered BMS's product pipeline and therapeutic focus.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" /> The Celgene acquisition brought several significant assets into the BMS portfolio, including the blockbuster cancer drug Revlimid and a pipeline of next-generation therapies in oncology, hematology, and immunology. The deal was not without controversy at the time of its announcement, as some investors initially questioned the valuation and strategic rationale. However, the combined company emerged as a leader in several high-growth therapeutic areas.
Caforio built his career at Bristol-Myers Squibb over many years, advancing through a series of increasingly senior leadership roles within the company. His trajectory at BMS ultimately led to his appointment as the company's Chief Executive Officer. As CEO, Caforio was responsible for the strategic direction of one of the largest biopharmaceutical companies in the world, with operations spanning oncology, cardiovascular medicine, immunology, and other therapeutic areas.


Caforio became known within the industry for his willingness to pursue large-scale mergers and acquisitions as a means of driving growth and refreshing the company's drug pipeline.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" /> Under his leadership, BMS also invested in areas such as immuno-oncology, cardiovascular disease, and immunoscience, seeking to build a diversified portfolio of innovative medicines.
=== The Celgene Acquisition ===


==== Leadership Transition and Retirement ====
The defining strategic move of Caforio's tenure as CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb was the company's acquisition of Celgene Corporation, completed in 2019. Valued at approximately $74 billion, the deal ranked among the largest mergers and acquisitions in the history of the pharmaceutical industry.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" /> The acquisition of Celgene brought into BMS's portfolio a number of significant assets, most notably [[Revlimid]] (lenalidomide), a blockbuster treatment for multiple myeloma and other hematological cancers, as well as a pipeline of drugs in various stages of development. The merger significantly expanded BMS's presence in oncology and hematology, areas that were already core to the company's strategy.


On April 26, 2023, Bristol Myers Squibb announced a leadership transition plan under which Caforio would retire as CEO, effective November 1, 2023. The company stated that Caforio would continue to serve as Executive Chairman following his departure from the CEO role.<ref name="bms-transition" /> Christopher Boerner, who had been serving as Chief Operating Officer of Bristol-Myers Squibb, was named as Caforio's successor as CEO.<ref name="stat-exit">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 30, 2023 |title=An exit interview with Bristol Myers Squibb CEO Giovanni Caforio |url=https://www.statnews.com/2023/10/30/bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-giovanni-caforio-interview/ |work=STAT |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The decision to pursue the Celgene deal was not without controversy at the time it was announced. Some BMS shareholders initially raised objections to the terms and strategic rationale of the acquisition, and the deal became a focal point of debate within the investment community. However, the merger ultimately received shareholder approval and was completed, fundamentally transforming BMS's scale and therapeutic portfolio.


The transition represented the culmination of a succession planning process that BMS had undertaken over a period of time. In an exit interview with STAT News published on October 30, 2023, Caforio discussed his tenure and the trajectory of the company as he prepared to step down. The interview was published on the eve of his departure from the CEO role, with Boerner set to formally replace him.<ref name="stat-exit" />
Caforio's willingness to pursue large-scale M&A activity became a defining characteristic of his leadership style. In an exit interview with STAT News published in October 2023, Caforio reflected on his tenure and the strategic decisions that shaped BMS during his time as CEO.<ref name="stat-exit">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=October 30, 2023 |title=An exit interview with Bristol Myers Squibb CEO Giovanni Caforio |url=https://www.statnews.com/2023/10/30/bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-giovanni-caforio-interview/ |work=STAT |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


==== Compensation ====
=== Leadership Transition and Retirement from BMS ===


In his final year as CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb, Caforio received total compensation of approximately $19.7 million, according to the company's proxy filing. This represented a slight decrease from the $20.1 million he had collected in 2022.<ref name="fierce-compensation">{{cite news |date=March 21, 2024 |title=In his swan song at Bristol Myers Squibb, former CEO Giovanni Caforio pulled down $19.7M |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/his-swan-song-bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-caforio-pulled-down-197m |work=Fierce Pharma |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The compensation figures reflected the standard structure for chief executives of major pharmaceutical companies, typically comprising a base salary, annual incentive awards, and long-term equity-based compensation.
On April 26, 2023, Bristol-Myers Squibb announced a formal leadership transition plan under which Caforio would retire as CEO effective November 1, 2023.<ref name="bms-transition" /> Under the plan, Caforio was to continue serving as Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors following his departure from the CEO role, providing continuity during the transition period.<ref name="bms-transition" />


=== Novartis ===
Christopher Boerner, who had been serving as BMS's Chief Operating Officer, was named as Caforio's successor as CEO.<ref name="stat-exit" /> The transition was characterized as an orderly and planned succession, with the company's board having engaged in long-term succession planning.


==== Nomination as Board Chairman ====
In his final full year as CEO, Caforio received total compensation of approximately $19.7 million, a slight decrease from the $20.1 million he had earned in 2022, according to the company's proxy filing disclosed in March 2024.<ref name="fierce-compensation">{{cite news |title=In his swan song at Bristol Myers Squibb, former CEO Giovanni Caforio pulled down $19.7M |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/his-swan-song-bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-caforio-pulled-down-197m |work=Fierce Pharma |date=March 21, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The compensation package reflected a combination of base salary, annual incentive payments, stock awards, and other compensation elements typical of major pharmaceutical company executives.


In April 2024, Novartis announced that it would propose Giovanni Caforio to serve as the next Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Swiss pharmaceutical company. The announcement, reported by multiple industry outlets on April 23, 2024, marked Caforio's return to a prominent leadership role in the pharmaceutical industry following his departure from Bristol-Myers Squibb.<ref name="biopharma-dive">{{cite news |date=April 23, 2024 |title=Former Bristol Myers CEO tapped as Novartis' next board chair |url=https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/novartis-giovanni-caforio-board-chair-appoint-reinhardt/713956/ |work=BioPharma Dive |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />
=== Transition to Novartis ===


The nomination attracted attention within the industry in part because of Caforio's track record of pursuing large mergers and acquisitions during his time at BMS. Industry observers speculated about whether Caforio's arrival at Novartis might signal a shift toward a more aggressive M&A strategy at the Swiss company.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />
Following his departure from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Caforio's next major career move came in April 2024, when Novartis announced that it would nominate him to serve as the next Chairman of its Board of Directors.<ref name="biopharma-dive">{{cite news |title=Former Bristol Myers CEO tapped as Novartis' next board chair |url=https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/novartis-giovanni-caforio-board-chair-appoint-reinhardt/713956/ |work=BioPharma Dive |date=April 23, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The announcement drew immediate attention in the pharmaceutical industry, both because of Caforio's prominent profile and because of questions about potential noncompete agreements from his tenure at BMS.


==== Noncompete Considerations ====
Fierce Pharma reported in July 2024 that the move to Novartis raised questions about whether noncompete provisions in Caforio's agreements with Bristol-Myers Squibb might present complications. Caforio had recently stepped down as BMS's CEO and chairman, and the move to serve as board chair of a direct competitor was noted by industry observers.<ref name="fierce-noncompete">{{cite news |title=As former BMS CEO Giovanni Caforio plots move to Novartis, will noncompete issues come into play? |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-heading-novartis-will-noncompetes-get-way |work=Fierce Pharma |date=July 1, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Caforio's move from Bristol-Myers Squibb to Novartis raised questions about potential noncompete issues, given that both companies operate in overlapping therapeutic areas within the global pharmaceutical market. Fierce Pharma reported on July 1, 2024, that the transition raised the question of whether noncompete agreements from his time at BMS could come into play. Novartis had recently confirmed it would propose Caforio as its next board chairman, and the move from one major pharmaceutical company to a direct competitor attracted scrutiny regarding any contractual restrictions that might apply.<ref name="fierce-noncompete">{{cite news |date=July 1, 2024 |title=As former BMS CEO Giovanni Caforio plots move to Novartis, will noncompete issues come into play? |url=https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-heading-novartis-will-noncompetes-get-way |work=Fierce Pharma |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The nomination of Caforio as Novartis board chair also prompted speculation about the strategic direction Novartis might take under his leadership of the board. Given Caforio's track record of pursuing large-scale mergers and acquisitions at BMS—most notably the $74 billion Celgene deal—some industry analysts speculated that his chairmanship could herald a more aggressive M&A strategy at Novartis.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />


==== Election and Re-election ====
=== Chairman of Novartis ===


Despite the scrutiny surrounding his transition, Caforio assumed the role of Chairman of the Board of Directors at Novartis. At the company's 2025 Annual General Meeting, held on March 7, 2025, Novartis shareholders approved all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors, including the re-election of Caforio as a member of the Board. The same meeting saw shareholders approve the company's 28th consecutive dividend increase to CHF 3.50 per share for the 2024 fiscal year, representing a 6.1% increase and a 3.5% yield.<ref name="novartis-agm" />
Caforio's appointment as Chairman of the Novartis Board of Directors was confirmed at the company's 2025 Annual General Meeting, held on March 7, 2025. At that meeting, Novartis shareholders approved all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors, including the election of Caforio as Chairman.<ref name="novartis-agm-2025" /> In addition to the election of the board, shareholders at the same meeting approved a 28th consecutive dividend increase, raising the per-share dividend to CHF 3.50, an increase of 6.1 percent over the prior year, representing a yield of approximately 3.5 percent.<ref name="novartis-agm-2025" />


As of 2025, Caforio's biography on the Novartis corporate website describes him as having had an international career in the healthcare industry spanning more than 35 years.<ref name="novartis-bio" />
As of March 2025, Caforio's biography on the Novartis website described him as having had "an international career in the healthcare industry spanning more than 35 years."<ref name="novartis-bio" /> The role of Novartis board chairman placed Caforio at the helm of corporate governance at one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, overseeing strategic direction, executive management oversight, and stakeholder relations.


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Giovanni Caforio holds both Italian and American nationality.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> He holds a Doctor of Medicine degree, reflecting his original training as a physician before transitioning into pharmaceutical industry management.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> Beyond these publicly documented facts, Caforio has maintained a relatively private personal life, with limited public information available about his family or personal interests outside of his professional activities.
Giovanni Caforio holds dual Italian and American nationality.<ref name="novartis-bio" /> Beyond his professional career, limited information about his personal life is available in public sources. Caforio has maintained a relatively private personal profile throughout his career, with public disclosures focusing primarily on his professional activities and corporate governance roles.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Caforio's leadership of Bristol-Myers Squibb during a period of significant transformation earned him recognition as one of the more consequential pharmaceutical industry executives of his era. The Celgene acquisition, valued at approximately $74 billion, remains one of the largest transactions in the history of the pharmaceutical sector and is closely associated with Caforio's strategic vision for BMS.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />
Caforio's leadership of Bristol-Myers Squibb during a transformative period in the company's history earned him recognition as one of the more consequential pharmaceutical industry executives of his era. The Celgene acquisition, which he championed, was one of the largest pharmaceutical deals ever completed and fundamentally reshaped BMS's business.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />


His appointment as Chairman of the Board of Novartis, one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies by revenue and market capitalization, further underscored his standing within the global healthcare industry. The fact that Novartis selected a former CEO of a major competitor to lead its board reflected the company's confidence in Caforio's experience and strategic judgment.<ref name="biopharma-dive" />
His selection as Chairman of the Board of Novartis in 2024 and 2025 further underscored his standing within the global pharmaceutical industry. The appointment to lead the board of a second major multinational pharmaceutical company—after having served as CEO and Chairman of another—placed Caforio among a small group of executives to have held top leadership positions at multiple major global pharmaceutical firms.<ref name="biopharma-dive" /><ref name="novartis-agm-2025" />


Caforio's compensation during his final year at BMS — approximately $19.7 million — placed him among the highest-compensated executives in the pharmaceutical industry, consistent with the scale and complexity of the organization he led.<ref name="fierce-compensation" />
Caforio's total compensation of approximately $19.7 million in his final full year as BMS CEO reflected the company's valuation of his contributions during a period of significant strategic transformation.<ref name="fierce-compensation" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Giovanni Caforio's legacy in the pharmaceutical industry is most closely tied to his leadership of Bristol-Myers Squibb during a critical period of strategic repositioning. The $74 billion acquisition of Celgene in 2019 was the defining transaction of his tenure and one of the most significant mergers in the history of the pharmaceutical industry. The deal transformed BMS from a company facing significant patent cliffs on several key products into a diversified biopharmaceutical organization with a broad portfolio of oncology, hematology, and immunology assets.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />
Giovanni Caforio's legacy in the pharmaceutical industry is most closely associated with the strategic transformation of Bristol-Myers Squibb through the $74 billion acquisition of Celgene in 2019. That deal, among the largest in pharmaceutical industry history, brought together two major companies with complementary portfolios in oncology, hematology, and immunology, and it positioned BMS as one of the leading companies in cancer treatment and research.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />


The succession process at BMS, which resulted in Christopher Boerner taking over as CEO on November 1, 2023, was managed as a planned transition rather than an abrupt departure, suggesting a deliberate approach to leadership continuity.<ref name="bms-transition" /><ref name="stat-exit" />
The leadership transition at BMS, announced in April 2023, was structured as a planned and orderly succession, with Caforio remaining as Executive Chairman to ensure continuity before his full departure.<ref name="bms-transition" /> His successor, Christopher Boerner, inherited a company that had been significantly reshaped by the Celgene merger and the strategic decisions made during Caforio's tenure.<ref name="stat-exit" />


Caforio's subsequent appointment as Chairman of Novartis represented a notable career move that positioned him at the helm of another major global pharmaceutical company's governance structure. His dual Italian and American nationality and his medical training have been cited as elements that distinguish his profile among top pharmaceutical executives, many of whom lack direct clinical backgrounds.<ref name="novartis-bio" />
Caforio's subsequent move to Novartis as board chairman represented a continuation of his influence in the pharmaceutical industry at the highest levels of corporate governance. The appointment drew attention for its potential implications for Novartis's strategic direction, particularly with respect to M&A activity, given Caforio's established track record of pursuing transformative deals.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" /><ref name="fierce-noncompete" />


Industry observers have noted that Caforio's track record of large-scale M&A activity at BMS may influence the strategic direction of Novartis during his tenure as Chairman, though the extent of any such influence remains to be seen.<ref name="fierce-novartis-chair" />
His career trajectory—from his medical training in Italy through decades of leadership at one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, and subsequently to the chairmanship of another—illustrates a path through the upper echelons of the global healthcare industry. With more than 35 years of experience in the field, Caforio's career has encompassed periods of significant change in the pharmaceutical industry, including the growing emphasis on biologics, immuno-oncology, and large-scale consolidation through mergers and acquisitions.<ref name="novartis-bio" />


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 05:16, 24 February 2026




Giovanni Caforio
BornTemplate:Birth year and age
NationalityItalian, American
OccupationPharmaceutical executive
TitleChairman of the Board, Novartis
Known forFormer Chairman and CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb
EducationDoctor of Medicine (M.D.)

Giovanni Caforio (born 1964) is an Italian-American pharmaceutical executive who served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS), one of the world's largest biopharmaceutical companies. Over the course of a career spanning more than 35 years in the global healthcare industry, Caforio rose through successive leadership roles at BMS before assuming the position of CEO, a role he held until his retirement on November 1, 2023.[1] During his tenure as CEO, he oversaw one of the pharmaceutical industry's largest mergers and acquisitions, the $74 billion acquisition of Celgene in 2019, a deal that significantly reshaped BMS's portfolio and competitive position in oncology and immunology.[2] Following his departure from BMS, Caforio was nominated and subsequently elected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Novartis, the Swiss multinational pharmaceutical company, a position confirmed by shareholders in 2025.[3]

Early Life

Giovanni Caforio was born in 1964 in Italy.[4] He holds both Italian and American nationality.[4] Details regarding his early childhood, family background, and upbringing have not been widely documented in public sources.

Education

Caforio holds a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree, a credential that has been consistently referenced in his professional titles throughout his career in the pharmaceutical industry.[1][4] The specific institution from which he obtained his medical degree has not been confirmed in available sources.

Career

Giovanni Caforio's career in the healthcare industry has spanned more than 35 years, during which he has held leadership positions at major pharmaceutical companies.[4]

Rise at Bristol-Myers Squibb

Caforio built his career at Bristol-Myers Squibb over many years, advancing through a series of increasingly senior leadership roles within the company. His trajectory at BMS ultimately led to his appointment as the company's Chief Executive Officer. As CEO, Caforio was responsible for the strategic direction of one of the largest biopharmaceutical companies in the world, with operations spanning oncology, cardiovascular medicine, immunology, and other therapeutic areas.

The Celgene Acquisition

The defining strategic move of Caforio's tenure as CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb was the company's acquisition of Celgene Corporation, completed in 2019. Valued at approximately $74 billion, the deal ranked among the largest mergers and acquisitions in the history of the pharmaceutical industry.[2] The acquisition of Celgene brought into BMS's portfolio a number of significant assets, most notably Revlimid (lenalidomide), a blockbuster treatment for multiple myeloma and other hematological cancers, as well as a pipeline of drugs in various stages of development. The merger significantly expanded BMS's presence in oncology and hematology, areas that were already core to the company's strategy.

The decision to pursue the Celgene deal was not without controversy at the time it was announced. Some BMS shareholders initially raised objections to the terms and strategic rationale of the acquisition, and the deal became a focal point of debate within the investment community. However, the merger ultimately received shareholder approval and was completed, fundamentally transforming BMS's scale and therapeutic portfolio.

Caforio's willingness to pursue large-scale M&A activity became a defining characteristic of his leadership style. In an exit interview with STAT News published in October 2023, Caforio reflected on his tenure and the strategic decisions that shaped BMS during his time as CEO.[5]

Leadership Transition and Retirement from BMS

On April 26, 2023, Bristol-Myers Squibb announced a formal leadership transition plan under which Caforio would retire as CEO effective November 1, 2023.[1] Under the plan, Caforio was to continue serving as Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors following his departure from the CEO role, providing continuity during the transition period.[1]

Christopher Boerner, who had been serving as BMS's Chief Operating Officer, was named as Caforio's successor as CEO.[5] The transition was characterized as an orderly and planned succession, with the company's board having engaged in long-term succession planning.

In his final full year as CEO, Caforio received total compensation of approximately $19.7 million, a slight decrease from the $20.1 million he had earned in 2022, according to the company's proxy filing disclosed in March 2024.[6] The compensation package reflected a combination of base salary, annual incentive payments, stock awards, and other compensation elements typical of major pharmaceutical company executives.

Transition to Novartis

Following his departure from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Caforio's next major career move came in April 2024, when Novartis announced that it would nominate him to serve as the next Chairman of its Board of Directors.[7] The announcement drew immediate attention in the pharmaceutical industry, both because of Caforio's prominent profile and because of questions about potential noncompete agreements from his tenure at BMS.

Fierce Pharma reported in July 2024 that the move to Novartis raised questions about whether noncompete provisions in Caforio's agreements with Bristol-Myers Squibb might present complications. Caforio had recently stepped down as BMS's CEO and chairman, and the move to serve as board chair of a direct competitor was noted by industry observers.[8]

The nomination of Caforio as Novartis board chair also prompted speculation about the strategic direction Novartis might take under his leadership of the board. Given Caforio's track record of pursuing large-scale mergers and acquisitions at BMS—most notably the $74 billion Celgene deal—some industry analysts speculated that his chairmanship could herald a more aggressive M&A strategy at Novartis.[2]

Chairman of Novartis

Caforio's appointment as Chairman of the Novartis Board of Directors was confirmed at the company's 2025 Annual General Meeting, held on March 7, 2025. At that meeting, Novartis shareholders approved all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors, including the election of Caforio as Chairman.[3] In addition to the election of the board, shareholders at the same meeting approved a 28th consecutive dividend increase, raising the per-share dividend to CHF 3.50, an increase of 6.1 percent over the prior year, representing a yield of approximately 3.5 percent.[3]

As of March 2025, Caforio's biography on the Novartis website described him as having had "an international career in the healthcare industry spanning more than 35 years."[4] The role of Novartis board chairman placed Caforio at the helm of corporate governance at one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, overseeing strategic direction, executive management oversight, and stakeholder relations.

Personal Life

Giovanni Caforio holds dual Italian and American nationality.[4] Beyond his professional career, limited information about his personal life is available in public sources. Caforio has maintained a relatively private personal profile throughout his career, with public disclosures focusing primarily on his professional activities and corporate governance roles.

Recognition

Caforio's leadership of Bristol-Myers Squibb during a transformative period in the company's history earned him recognition as one of the more consequential pharmaceutical industry executives of his era. The Celgene acquisition, which he championed, was one of the largest pharmaceutical deals ever completed and fundamentally reshaped BMS's business.[2]

His selection as Chairman of the Board of Novartis in 2024 and 2025 further underscored his standing within the global pharmaceutical industry. The appointment to lead the board of a second major multinational pharmaceutical company—after having served as CEO and Chairman of another—placed Caforio among a small group of executives to have held top leadership positions at multiple major global pharmaceutical firms.[7][3]

Caforio's total compensation of approximately $19.7 million in his final full year as BMS CEO reflected the company's valuation of his contributions during a period of significant strategic transformation.[6]

Legacy

Giovanni Caforio's legacy in the pharmaceutical industry is most closely associated with the strategic transformation of Bristol-Myers Squibb through the $74 billion acquisition of Celgene in 2019. That deal, among the largest in pharmaceutical industry history, brought together two major companies with complementary portfolios in oncology, hematology, and immunology, and it positioned BMS as one of the leading companies in cancer treatment and research.[2]

The leadership transition at BMS, announced in April 2023, was structured as a planned and orderly succession, with Caforio remaining as Executive Chairman to ensure continuity before his full departure.[1] His successor, Christopher Boerner, inherited a company that had been significantly reshaped by the Celgene merger and the strategic decisions made during Caforio's tenure.[5]

Caforio's subsequent move to Novartis as board chairman represented a continuation of his influence in the pharmaceutical industry at the highest levels of corporate governance. The appointment drew attention for its potential implications for Novartis's strategic direction, particularly with respect to M&A activity, given Caforio's established track record of pursuing transformative deals.[2][8]

His career trajectory—from his medical training in Italy through decades of leadership at one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, and subsequently to the chairmanship of another—illustrates a path through the upper echelons of the global healthcare industry. With more than 35 years of experience in the field, Caforio's career has encompassed periods of significant change in the pharmaceutical industry, including the growing emphasis on biologics, immuno-oncology, and large-scale consolidation through mergers and acquisitions.[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Bristol Myers Squibb Announces Leadership Transition Plan".Bristol Myers Squibb.April 26, 2023.https://news.bms.com/news/details/2023/Bristol-Myers-Squibb-Announces-Leadership-Transition-Plan/default.aspx.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Novartis nominates former Bristol Myers CEO Giovanni Caforio as its new chair. Will M&A deals follow?".Fierce Pharma.April 23, 2024.https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/novartis-nominates-former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-its-new-chair-large-ma-next-0.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "Novartis shareholders approve all resolutions proposed by the Board of Directors at the 2025 Annual General Meeting".Novartis.March 7, 2025.https://www.novartis.com/news/media-releases/novartis-shareholders-approve-all-resolutions-proposed-board-directors-2025-annual-general-meeting.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 "Giovanni Caforio, M.D.".Novartis.March 7, 2025.https://www.novartis.com/about/board-directors/giovanni-caforio.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "An exit interview with Bristol Myers Squibb CEO Giovanni Caforio".STAT.October 30, 2023.https://www.statnews.com/2023/10/30/bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-giovanni-caforio-interview/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "In his swan song at Bristol Myers Squibb, former CEO Giovanni Caforio pulled down $19.7M".Fierce Pharma.March 21, 2024.https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/his-swan-song-bristol-myers-squibb-ceo-caforio-pulled-down-197m.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Former Bristol Myers CEO tapped as Novartis' next board chair".BioPharma Dive.April 23, 2024.https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/novartis-giovanni-caforio-board-chair-appoint-reinhardt/713956/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "As former BMS CEO Giovanni Caforio plots move to Novartis, will noncompete issues come into play?".Fierce Pharma.July 1, 2024.https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/former-bristol-myers-ceo-giovanni-caforio-heading-novartis-will-noncompetes-get-way.Retrieved 2026-02-24.