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Business Models: Whats Getting Funded

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Medarex and ... The Deal. Generates fully-human antibodies in mice ... Many investors give no credit for a Medarex deal. Conclusions. 22. Conclusions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Business Models: Whats Getting Funded


1
Business ModelsWhats Getting Funded
  • Matthew Plunkett, Ph.D.
  • Healthcare Investment Banking

April 2, 2003
2
Introduction
  • What business models can I choose?
  • What business models are getting First-Round
    funding today?
  • What business models are receiving Large
    financing today?
  • What affects investor interest in business
    models?
  • How can I build for the long term?

3
Business Models in Biopharma
  • How are you going to make money?
  • What will you sell?
  • Pills (Products)
  • Novel biopharma technologies / capabilities
    (Platforms)
  • Picks and shovels (2000) or Tools (2003)
  • Information
  • Software
  • How will you fund it?
  • Product sales
  • Corporate partnerships
  • Risk-Sharing
  • Venture dollars
  • Managing and balancing risk / reward
  • Breadth of opportunity vs. pursuing a smaller
    number of things further
  • No vs. Late vs. Early partnerships

4
Whats Getting Funded?
5
Your Idea
  • Your Idea A novel approach to determine
    interacting proteins within a cell
  • What can I do?
  • Sell data to biotech / pharma
  • Make an instrument and sell it to biotech /
    pharma
  • Develop some promising programs, then partner
    with biotech / pharma
  • Advance some programs to clinical development
    stage, then (maybe) partner
  • What model should you choose?
  • Classifications
  • Products (Clinical-stage program RD is mostly
    D) Tercica, Xcel Pharma
  • Platforms (Earlier-stage programs) Alexza, Raven
  • Tools (Everything else services, data, boxes,
    etc.) Guava, Picoliter

6
Whats Getting Funded?
  • First-Round Biopharma Investments, 1996-Present

7
Whats Getting Funded?
  • Biopharma Investments gt 20M, 1996-Present

8
Companies
9
Why is it Getting Funded?
10
Venture Drivers
  • Need for a Return
  • High multiples (expensive money)
  • Need to Put to Work
  • Many VC investors have 400-800 M on-hand
  • Mandates LARGE investments in LARGE opportunities
  • Need for Exit
  • Public comparables play into valuation
  • IPO vs. MA as exit strategy
  • Impact of Public Valuations
  • Cannot justify ANY investment when public
    comparables are poorly valued
  • What will be in favor in 3-5 years hence?

11
Linked Markets Public and Private
  • Public Markets
  • Signpost for VC Investors
  • Horrific drops in valuations
  • Negative fund flows most of last two years
  • Search for reduced downside risk and near-term
    upside
  • Binary risk is Name of the Game
  • Private Markets
  • Both Lead and Trail public markets
  • RNAi investments (may be) ahead of their time
  • Valuations lag public markets
  • Multiple shots on goal avoid binary risk
  • Looking to build and grow a sustainable business

12
Public Market Valuations
  • Antibody Composite Abgenix, Cambridge Antibody,
    Corixa, Dyax, Genmab, ImClone, Immunogen,
    Immunomedics, Medarex, Protein Design Labs,
    Seattle Genetics, Tanox
  • Genomics Composite Celera, CuraGen, Deltagen,
    Human Genome, Incyte, Lexicon, Millenium, Myriad,
    Sequenom
  • Late-Stage Companies BioMarin, Cell
    Therapeutics, Icos, ImClone, Neurocrine, Tanox,
    Versicor
  • Early-Stage Companies Arena, Dyax, Keryx, Kosan,
    Rigel, Sangamo, Seattle Genetics,
  • Tools Companies ABI, Affymetrix, Bruker AXS,
    Bruker Daltonics, Caliper, Gene Logic, Illumina,
    Luminex, Perkin Elmer, Third Wave, Transgenomic,
    Waters

13
Business Model Preferences
  • Early-Stage Investors
  • Partnerships represent non-dilutive financing
  • Allows multiple product development programs
  • Multiple shots on goal avoid binary risk
  • Looking to build and grow a sustainable business
  • Public Investors
  • CANNOT focus on more than a single product
  • Pipeline is a box to be checked, not an asset
    to be valued
  • Looking for large and near-term upside

14
Public Investors Products
  • Old Model
  • An era of 25 million IPOs and 100 million
    pre-money valuations
  • Unsophisticated investors, unable to evaluate
    quality of pipeline programs
  • Pharma partnerships needed to both "validate" and
    fund lead programs
  • Consequently, tremendous biotech shareholder
    value sacrificed to Pharma
  • New Model
  • An era of much larger offerings and market
    capitalizations (100/300)
  • Investors are most interested in companies with
    retained marketing rights
  • Sophisticated investors seek high-quality
    pipeline programs, which are highly financable
  • Second-generation biotech success stories like
    Biogen, Genzyme and Gilead have become profitable
    while marketing their own drugs consequently
    their valuations exceed 5 billion
  • In contrast, companies with approved yet
    partnered drugs (Enzon, QLT, Sepracor, and
    Vertex) either remain unprofitable or have only
    become barely profitable, and lag significantly
    behind those peers with retained marketing rights

15
Public Investors Tools
  • Old Model
  • Sell Picks and Shovels to those mining for
    genomic gold
  • Revenue growth, not profitability
  • Momentum
  • New markets will emerge (SNP genotyping)
  • Unproven business models and unproven technology
    will work
  • New Model
  • A cyclical industry, highly susceptible to
    economic downturn
  • Large-cap tools companies have been hurt by
    slowdown in capital spending by pharma, biotech,
    academia and government
  • However, a perception that profitability
    mitigates downside risk
  • Smaller tools companies face challenges due to
    lack of critical mass, competitive threats and
    poor visibility on profitability
  • Greater exposure to downside risk
  • However, strong revenue growth and earnings will
    always captivate investor interest

16
Risk Sharing
17
Buy vs. Build vs. Risk-Share
  • Partnering
  • Allows more diversification of risk
  • Access specific discovery, development and sales
    expertise
  • Provides funding for discovery and clinical
    trials
  • Desirable for "non-core" programs
  • Internal Funding
  • Control over program remains with biotech company
  • Higher reward for successful development, product
    launch
  • Greater investor interest in companies with
    marketing rights
  • Risk-Sharing
  • Shared funding, shared rewards
  • Provides access to complementary expertise
  • Partner is highly incentivized to succeed

18
BioMarin and Genzyme
  • The Deal
  • A 5050 JV between BioMarin and Genzyme to
    develop and commercialize Aldurazyme
  • BioMarin contributes IP, manufacturing for
    Aldurazyme
  • Genzyme brings development, sales, marketing
    expertise for enzyme replacement therapies
  • Terms
  • Costs shared equally throughout development
  • Milestone payments to BioMarin
  • Sales and marketing by Genzyme
  • Observations
  • Partner controls clinical trial design,
    decisions, newsflow, etc.
  • Does not provide for start of ones own sales and
    marketing presence

19
TransForm and Lilly
  • The Deal
  • Centered about TransForms high-throughput,
    robotic and informatic based approach to new
    forms and formulations of active molecules
  • A three-part deal
  • Several discovery stage compounds / week ( 500
    experiments per compound)
  • Late preclinical / clinical compounds ( 10,000
    experiments per compound)
  • An important Lilly compound thwarted by
    solubility issues
  • Terms
  • Research support and equity investment to
    TransForm
  • Milestones and royalties for all three parts
  • TransForm will receive 10-50 ownership for the
    rescued compound
  • Observations
  • Innovating in the Industrys Backwaters -- In
    Vivo

20
Medarex and ...
  • The Deal
  • Generates fully-human antibodies in mice
  • Perhaps the most prolific deal-maker in the
    antibody world (gt 40 deals)
  • Terms
  • Some deals fee-for-service
  • Others are 5050 cost and reward splits
  • Observations
  • Many potential partners view company as
    overcommitted
  • Many investors give no credit for a Medarex deal

21
Conclusions
22
Conclusions
  • Financing Environment
  • Tulip mania happens once every 400 years
  • New venture-funded companies increasingly
    product focused and driven
  • Tools companies will not return to vogue
  • Platforms must be product focused
  • Business Models Early-Stage
  • Platform to Products
  • Unique and proprietary approach to generate many
    shots on goal
  • Partners to share risk / costs, broaden
    opportunity, add expertise
  • Business Models Late-Stage
  • A few truly exciting products with human safety
    (better, efficacy) data
  • Unpartnered products, or substantial retained
    rights
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