Title: Burrill
1 Dr. Ganesh Kishore, Managing Director Burrill
Company CEO, Malaysia Life Science Capital
Fund November 2, 2007
2Themes and Take Home Messages
- The Global Biotech Enterprise is Transforming the
World and is being Transformed by it - Business Models of the Biotech Industry are
evolving rapidly from FIPCO to VIPCO - Biotech Businesses are increasingly global .. For
sourcing , technology and people - Entrenched players Big Pharma, Ag, Food,
Chemical are adapting Open Innovation
Partnering strategies to accelerate and augment
pipeline, access top talent - Biotech investors increasingly provide smart
capital, navigating the investee companies to
build best of breed businesses and generate
superior financial returns - Seed early stage financing for biotech is a
major issue
3The Life Science Commercialization Path
- Source of Funds
- Federal grants for basic research
- Private venture capital for early stage companies
University Research
Public Equity Markets
Partnerships
Large Corporations
4A Global Transformation
To
From
Chemistry
Biochemistry
On Size fits all drugs
Personalized medicine
Aging (just happens)
Aging is optional / controllable
Therapeutics/diagnostics/devices
Theranostics
Treating sickness
Preventing Sickness
Single Disease
Multi-factorial, complex
5A Global Transformation
To
From
Fossil fuels
Alternative fuels (biomass conversion)
Unavailable local capital
Global arbitrage
Fully integrated business model (FIPCO)
Virtually Integrated business model (VIPCO)
Local companies
Global companies
US centric biotech industry
Global industry
Food for survival
Food for health
6Total Annual US Spend for Biotech/Pharma Research
- Flattening federal support
- NIH 29B
- Pharma 43B
- Biotech 30B
- TOTAL 100B or Rs. 3900 B
7India The opportunity
- Research Programs in Universities focused on
Translation Research - Global Technology Acquisitions
- - Innovative Applications
- Leverage global partners where appropriate
- - financing, technology, markets
8Key Industry Stats Biotech 2007
9US Biotech Financing 3Q 06 2Q 07
10Capital Raised 1980-2007 Partnering is back
11MA / Partnering
- Big Pharma continues to add products/key
technologies. - European pharmas continue to consolidate.
- Large biotech also increasingly active in the MA
space (2006 biotechs first hostile takeover). - There has been a decrease in sub-50
million-valued deals, with steady increase in
100 million to 500 million deals. - Indian generics companies are expanding into
Europe. - Acquisitions in the diagnostics space muted.
- MA premiums over IPO values.
12Mergers/ Acquisitions Partnering
BIG PHARMA/PHARMA
BIG PHARMA/BIOTECH
BIOTECH/BIOTECH
Bayer AG/Schering AG 19.9 billion
Abbot/Kos 3.7 billion
Gilead/Myogen 2.5 billion
Genentech/Tanox 900 million
Merck KGaA/Serono 12.9 billion
Eli Lilly/Icos 2.1 billion
Genzyme/AnorMED 560 million
UCB/Schwartz Pharma 5.4 billion
Merck/Sirna 1.1 billion
Illumina/Solexa 500 million
13Finance and Capital Markets
The global financial markets have created
additional opportunities for companies to look
outside their borders for financing
- Europeans on NASDAQ/NYSE
- Chinese on NYSE
- Americans on AIM/Euronext/SWX
- Other markets are available
- Mothers (Tokyo)
- DFX (Dubai)
- Hong Kong
14Industry MA Activity Total Number of Deals by
Total Deal Value
15Big Pharma Alliances in 2006
16Alliance Involving Regional Companies China,
India, Middle East
17IPOs Not What They Used to Be!
18IPOs Not What They Used to Be! (Continued)
19India A key partner as companies migrate from
FIPCO to VIPCO business model
FIPCO (Fully Integrated Pharma Co.)
VIPCO (Virtually Integrated Pharma Co.)
20New Product Launches 97 - 06
21Innovation Gap Getting Wider
22Biotechnology Drugs in Clinical Development
23Manufacturer Reported Serious Adverse Events Per
Fiscal Year
24Pulled from the Market
Blockbuster drugs pulled from the market gave
investors concern
25Our due diligence process
Final Review by BC
LOG IN
Company Meetings Presentations
Business Plans
Inquiries and Contacts
Preliminary Review by Corporate Partners with
Relevant Domain Expertise
Investment Committee Decision
Due Diligence Process
Preliminary Review by Select Advisory Board
Members
- Evaluate
- Market Size
- Competition
- IP
- License Agreements
- Management
- Budget
- Clinical/Technical Risk
- Financial Strategy
- Exit Strategy
Thank You Sent
Final Term Sheet
Preliminary Review by Associate
Final Due Diligence
Investment Committee Decision
Executive Summary with Synopsis Distributed
Executive Summary with Synopsis Distributed
NO
YES
Execution of Deal
Rejected
Prepare Preliminary Investment Memorandum
Associate to draft letter
Weekly Meeting
Weekly Meeting
Investment Professionals, Secondees
Burrill Investment
Inquiry, contacts, follow up, strategy
-
-
Review executive summaries
Review executive summaries
Things We Do To Add Value
Final Due Diligence
Final Due Diligence by Advisory Board
- Commission Formal IP/License Review
- Engage Outside Consultants, as necessary
- Complete Preliminary Process
YES
YES
NO
NO
- Strategy development
- Recruit Board Members Senior Executives
- Financing creativity access
- Clinical development strategy execution
- Tactical review assistance
- Partnering-Strategy/access/execution
Distribute Business Plan For Review
Rejected
NO
YES
NO
YES
Issue Term Sheet
Subsequent Weekly Meeting
Review business plans
Exit
YES
YES
Negotiate Deal and Funding Strategy
Business Plan of Interest
Solicit Interest from Potential Co-Investors
Designate team for project follow through
IPO
Trade Sale
- Introduce bankers
- Pricing committee help
- Access to investors
- Financing strategy
- Network/access
- Deal strategy
- Deal execution
Prepare Final Investment Memo
26The US 438 Billion Global Health and Wellness
Market
27Burrill Nutraceutical Index, 2002 to 2006
28The opportunity space for Ag biotech
Industrial/Wellness
Production Ag
Grain processing
150 Billion
250 Billion
1000 Billion
Seeds
Chemicals
29Major players Production Ag
30Stock Market Performance of White Biotech
companies
31Themes and Take Home Messages
- Small companies are a critical component of any
open innovation strategy - Role of diverse sources of financing for a
capital intensive industry - Its a global business from day one
- Perfect storm for bio businesses
- Technology
- Constrained natural resources
- Market readiness
- Importance of partners
- Consumer driven personalization