It's time for the IN VIVO Blog's Fourth Annual Deal of the Year! competition. This year we're once again presenting awards in three categories to highlight the most interesting and creative deal making solutions of the year. The categories are: M&A Deal of the Year, Alliance Deal of the Year, and Exit/Financing Deal of the Year. We'll supply the nominations (a half dozen in each category throughout December) and you, the voting public, will decide the winners (by voting early and often, commencing once we've announced all the nominees). Strap yourselves in, it's The Race for the Roger™.
Blink and you might have missed it, although our Pink Sheet colleagues didn't.
In October, Atlas Ventures made its first asset-financing play under the umbrella of its Atlas Venture Development Corp. (AVDC), teaming with OrbiMed Advisors to share the funding of Arteaus Therapeutics with an $18 million A round. Arteaus is one thing and one thing only: an in-licensed migraine drug; no office, no outside management, and no backup R&D programs.
We nominate Arteaus not only because it's the first out of the gate, but also because of its odd circumstances. The migraine drug comes from Eli Lilly, which has made plenty of noise in the past year or so about building a network of three "mirror" funds to do what Atlas is doing: take compounds that Lilly doesn't want to develop on its own, bring in outside funding help, and give Lilly a "clawback" option once the drug reaches an agreed-upon milestone. But wait a minute: Atlas isn't one of Lilly's mirror funds. Which either means Atlas and OrbiMed gave Lilly a deal it couldn't refuse, or the mirror fund thing is a bigger headache than first expected. Well, we knew the latter already, to some extent: Before launch, CMEA's Velocity was supposed to be one of the mirror funds; Lilly was even named as a strategic backer in the Velocity fundraising material. But those plans disintegrated in late 2010 or early 2011, and when Velocity formally launched in June, it was no longer a Mirror fund. (Velocity is being funded from the current CMEA VII, and the San Francisco firm has no plans to raise an eighth fund.)
Photo courtesy of flickrer Quinn.Anya via a Creative Commons license.
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