It turns out a lot of the words that contain the letters "IPO" are biomedical words:
Pluripotent. Liposomal. Adiposis. Gallipot.
And it turns out a lot of biomedical companies have IPO in them, too. Since we last met 14 days ago, dear reader, a stunning 13 biotechs have made their public debuts, although if not for Eleven Biotherapeutics, it would have been 12.
There are all kinds of ways to slice and dice this baker's dozen; one way is to look at first-day pops. Indeed, our colleagues at "The Pink Sheet" will soon have a detailed look at the crazy first-day run-up of RNAi developer Dicerna Therapeutics; the 207% gain was the biggest in biotech since Antigenics jumped 241% in February 2000, according to Renaissance Capital. (More on Dicerna's IPO in the roundup below.)
But with the momentum that began in earnest last spring showing no signs of tapering off, we're curious about a different indicator: insider purchases. As soon as IPOs began to rebound from the financial crisis, insiders often did heavy lifting to get the deals off the ground.
But those levels began to decline in 2013, as Atlas Venture partner Bruce Booth noted on his blog last fall. He also noted that insider participation could signal a cooling of the market. Well, yes, but as we noted on this blog in early 2012, it's hard to draw conclusions about deal-by-deal participation. Is heavy insider presence a sign of desperation to get a deal done, or is it a sign of singular enthusiasm? With crossover investors already on the cap table and wanting more at IPO, and with some VCs playing more frequently on the public side of the fence, it can be hard to tell. What's more, SEC filings don't always divulge the true level of insider participation.
With all that, let's round up what this year's IPOs have revealed:
Here are the 13 IPOs the past two weeks, plus GlycoMimetics on January 9, and the percentage of insider participation noted in the regulatory filings:
Company
Name
|
Insider
Participation at IPO
|
Dicerna
|
57%
|
GlycoMimetics
|
29%
|
Celladon
|
25%
|
Eleven
|
24%
|
Trevena
|
23%
|
uniQure
|
22%
|
Genocea
|
21%
|
Egalet
|
20%
|
Auspex
|
12%
|
Cara
|
7%
|
Ultragenyx
|
0%
|
Acucela
|
0%
|
Revance
|
0%
|
Biocept
|
0%
|
For what it's worth, our own IPO data show insider participation in 2013 averaged 14%.
It's hard to say what all this means. Two years ago, when insiders shouldered heavy IPO loads -- taking on more risk instead of getting to precious exits -- it was easier to wonder about the desperation of it all. But now, more early stage biopharma investors (Third Rock Ventures, Flagship Ventures, OrbiMed Advisors, 5am Ventures and so on) are squaring the circle, from fundraising to new investment to IPO and back again, and biotech's boom means those extra IPO shares, if you can afford them, could be a lucrative proposition. And as our START-UP colleagues noted last year, biotech VCs haven't been shy about holding... and holding... and holding their shares well past IPO.
Is it worth mentioning that you also can't spell "ripoff" without IPO? Or perhaps we should leave you with this lighter linguistic play: The only anagram of IPO is "poi." A select few find the ancient Hawaiian staple of taro root mush delicious, but other people just need some time to appreciate it. Hmm, sounds like a recipe for what we cook up every two weeks, except we call it...
Dicerna Pharmaceuticals: RNA interference specialist Dicerna more than tripled in its first day of trading, making it the largest post-IPO pop since 2000. Demand for the offering was almost unprecedented with over $1 billion in orders, thanks in part to the RNAi-validating $700 million deal between Alnylam Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi's Genzyme that stole the show at January’s JP Morgan Healthcare conference. But unlike many IPO candidates going into 2014, Dicerna can't count on near-term milestones to support the stock. It expects to start clinical trials for the treatment of primary hyperoxaluria in 2015, with proof-of-concept data due later that year. It also expects to advance DCR-M1711 for cancers driven by the MYC oncogene in the first half of 2014, with proof-of-concept data in 2015. The biotech originally targeted $60 million, but by increasing its price to $15 and shares sold to six million, it ended up raising $90 million. The overallotment could add another $13.5 million. Last July, Dicerna raised a $60 million Series C round at $7 a share with crossover investors RA Capital, Deerfield Management and Brookside Capital Partners, as well as VCs Domain Associates, Skyline Venture Partners, Abingworth Bioventure, SROne and Oxford Biosciences Partners. At market close on February 6, Dicerna’s share price had settled to $33.98, down from its first-day high of $46, but still more than double the IPO offer price. – Stacy Lawrence
uniQure: The groundbreaking Dutch company gained the first regulatory approval for a gene therapy in the Western world, but it isn’t the first to go public. The company followed bluebird bio and, just by a few days, Celladon into the public markets with its February 4 listing on the Nasdaq, pricing 5.4 million shares at $17 apiece, above the anticipated range of $13 to $15. uniQure netted $81.9 million in the transaction, net of discounts and expenses; a greenshoe option could add $13.8 million more to the offering’s value. uniQure made history in November 2012, when EMA approved its Glybera (alipogene tiparvovec) to treat rare metabolic disease lipoprotein lipase deficiency. It’s part of a renaissance of interest in the field of gene therapy, once considered overly risky, and VCs have stepped up investment in new treatments in the field. After meeting with US regulators, uniQure plans to file an IND for Glybera by midyear. The company will also use its IPO proceeds to complete its Lexington, Mass. manufacturing facility and advance pipeline candidates including Phase I/II hemophilia treatment AMT-060. The company is planning a 2014 commercial launch of Glybera in Europe, in conjunction with regional partner Chiesi Farmaceutici. – Paul Bonanos
Lumos Pharma: Two years after paying $695 for a crowdsourced logo, Lumos has reeled in real cash: a $14 million Series A round led by Sante Ventures and New Enterprise Associates. The Austin, Texas firm is working on a small molecule therapeutic for the rare disease Creatine Transporter Deficiency (CTD), which is in preclinical studies. Lumos was among the first companies to gain support from the National Institutes of Health's "TRND" program, or Treatments for Rare and Neglected Diseases. As our sister publication START-UP noted in late 2011, CEO Rick Hawkins, a serial biotech entrepreneur, turned to TRND for help in what he called the worst disruption in the capital markets he'd seen in 35 years. CTD is an inborn error of metabolism that results in a profound lack of creatine in the brain. It's an x-linked disorder, which means boys are more affected than girls, with severe autism-spectrum symptoms such as language and speech delay, epilepsy and destructive behavior. Lumos is repurposing a drug -- what it calls a kinetically similar analog of creatine -- previously studied as a solid tumor treatment, and tested in knockout mice at the University of Cincinnati. Kevin Lalande, Managing Director of Sante Ventures, and NEA Partner Ed Mathers will join the Lumos board. – Alex Lash
NightstaRx: We admit we first thought about writing up NightstaRx to poke gentle fun at its name. (It apparently is pronounced "Nightstar," which makes for the first silent "X" in the English language.) But we would never be that shallow; the firm merits a write-up for other, more legitimate reasons. First, the company is the initial therapeutic investment from Syncona Partners, the new £200 million ($325 million) evergreen venture fund of the mighty Wellcome Trust, which has been rather slow to get cranking (it was first announced nearly two years ago). Once known as Project Sigma, Syncona aims to fund private biotechs and keep full ownership, at least for a while. It's for-profit and although fully funded by Wellcome, it's separate from the Trust's investment division, which has billions of pounds of private equity holdings. Now that Syncona is truly up and running, it should b be a significant source of early stage funding for European biotechs. Our second reason to highlight NightstaRx, a spinout from the University of Oxford, is that Syncona's £12 million ($20 million) will help move forward a gene therapy treatment for choroideremia, an inherited form of progressive blindness. It's the latest entry in a venture-backed field of ocular gene therapy companies, as The treatment uses a small modified virus, AAV.REP1, to deliver the correct version of the mutated gene that causes to cells in the retina of the eye. Six months after treatment with this therapy, the first six patients showed improvement in their vision in dim light and two of the six were able to read more lines on the eye chart, according to a January 16 paper in the British medical journal Lancet. The vector is currently in Phase I trials and follow-on tests are expected to begin in 2016. – Sten Stovall and Alex Lash
Best of the Rest (Highlights of Other Activity This Fortnight): Cancer MAb company Igenica announced a second closing of $14 million to its June 2012 Series C round, raising the total proceeds to $47 million…In another add-on, Sialix, which is focused on sialic acids to treat cancer and inflammatory-mediated diseases, tapped angel investors to supplement its August 2011 Series B financing with a $1.2 million tranche, bringing the round total to $4 million…Through a public offering, renal drug developer Keryx Biopharmaceuticals netted $108.2 million (including the overallotment)… Large FOPOs were also completed by other cancer-focused biotechs: Geron ($97.3 million) and Tesaro ($94.8 million)… While numerous initial public offerings were completed, there are still an abundance of filers in the wings, hoping to go public soon; among them is UK biotech Circassia, intending to float on the London Stock Exchange's Main Market, which, if successful, would be the first UK-market IPO since Clinigen Group’s £6.6 million flotation on AIM in October 2012 (UK biotech Egalet just completed its $50 million IPO, but on Nasdaq)… Canadian spec pharma Aptalis Holdings withdrew its December 2013 IPO filing on Nasdaq in favor of a $2.9 billion buy-out by Forest Laboratories… Through the sale of debt, Emergent BioSolutions raised $250 million to fund its acquisition of Cangene… Also through a debt offering, Fluidigm brought in $170 million to finance its takeover of DVS Sciences. – Maureen Riordan
Many thanqkxs to Mr. Thomas for the Scrabble photo via a Creative Commons license.
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