Hot Investor Mandate: Corporate Venture Arm of Asia-Based Global Pharma Seeks Novel Therapeutics & Diagnostics in CNS, Immunology, etc

3 Oct

A corporate venture arm of an Asia-based global pharma is looking to provide equity capital to seed and venture stage companies in the life science space, and invests across North America & Europe. The firm is looking to provide companies with $5 million over the lifetime of the investment and plans on making 2-3 investments over the next year.

The firm is currently looking for novel therapeutics, platform technologies, diagnostics, and vaccines. The firm is interested in novel drugs in broad disease areas including neuroscience (particularly neurodegeneration), immunology, inflammation, and rare disease, as well as diagnostics for neurodegenerative disorders. Current platform technology areas of interest include regenerative medicine, synthetic biology, microbiome, gene therapy, and nucleic acid medicine.

The firm strongly prefers that the company has a strong management team with experience in the industry. The firm historically has only invested as a co-investor although they are capable and looking to take a lead position if the correct opportunity arises. The firm is looking to allocate to companies that will eventually be able to partner long term with its parent company.

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email mandates@lifesciencenation.com.

Hot Investor Mandate: USA Investment Firm Seeks Diagnostics Technologies with High Potential in Global Markets & Dramatically Improve Patient Heath

3 Oct

A medical technology venture firm makes equity investments in early stage companies developing diagnostic technologies to accelerate the trend of precision medicine. The firm seeks a leading investment position and deep involvement with its portfolio companies. Typical investment ranges from $5-15 M and is calibrated to milestone attainment. With a global view and global operational capabilities, the firm is currently seeking opportunities around the world.

The firm focuses on three market segments that support knowledge-generating precision medicine diagnosis: 1) mobile health, data analytics, and healthcare IT; 2) high specificity in-vivo and in-vitro diagnostics; and 3) diagnostic technologies that guide or are a companion to precision therapies. The firm is looking for technologies that will dramatically improve patient health and have the potential for global markets and scale.

The firm is looking for experienced management teams with deep domain expertise. The firm typically request board representation post-investment.

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email mandates@lifesciencenation.com.

Hot Investor Mandate: Global VC Firm with USA and Asia Offices Seek to Invest Broadly Across Therapeutics, Devices, Diagnostics, and Digital Health

3 Oct

A venture capital firm with offices in USA and Asia is actively seeking investment opportunities across a wide range of industries. A significant allocation of the fund is dedicated to healthcare investments, while the rest of the fund will focus on investing in automation/robotics companies and relations to healthcare. On average, the size of investment is $2.5M. The firm seeks opportunities that provide some degree of investment loss protection through strong intellectual property. The firm can participate anywhere from Seed to Series B. The firm is willing to both lead and co-invest in companies located around the globe, with a preference in US, China, and Germany. The firm plans to make 6-8 investments per year but is flexible. The firm is actively seeking new investment opportunities.

The firm is a flexible and opportunistic investor that is currently considering Therapeutics, Medical Devices, Diagnostics, and Healthcare IT companies. The firm is open to all kinds of sectors and indications. The firm is open to novel medical devices of all FDA regulatory pathways, including 510k and PMA. The firm is strongly interested in medical devices and cardiovascular diseases. In terms of therapeutics, the firm will look at products of all stages from pre-clinical to phase III. Regarding medical devices and diagnostics, the firm will invest at any stage of development.

The firm will invest in privately held companies only. The firm has no specific requirements for the management team. The firm may take a board seat in applicable cases, but the firm prefers to have board observer rights in its portfolio company.

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email mandates@lifesciencenation.com.

Come Join These Registered Investors @ RESI Asia

26 Sep

By Karen Deyo, Senior Investor Research Analyst, LSN

With the RESI Asia fast approaching, we are excited for our first events taking place in Shanghai and Taipei. Together, these conferences will enable companies and investors to connect with the Chinese and Pacific Rim markets. Companies also have an unprecedented opportunity to be selected to present a poster and pitch at both events, greatly increasing their exposure (apply now for the RESI Innovation Challenge). Below is a partial list of registered investors for the RESI Asia conferences – register now to join them. We hope to see you in Shanghai on Nov 12th and Taipei on Nov 14th!

CONFIRMED RESI ASIA INVESTORS AND STRATEGIC PARTNERS

As of  September 26th, 2019

And More…

 

Meet with Life Science Nation @ BioJapan

26 Sep

By Claire Jeong, Director of Research, Asia BD, LSN

claireThe Life Science Nation team is continuing active preparations for our inaugural RESI Shanghai and Taipei conferences in November 12th and 14th, respectively. We are also excited to announce that we will be attending BioJapan and Regenerative Medicine Japan at the Yokohama Pacifico from October 9th – 11th. With over 1,000 organizations from around 34 countries expected to attend, we look forward to meeting a wide range of groups including startups, research universities, large pharmaceuticals, among others.

Creating a global ecosystem for early stage healthcare funding has always been the core business objective of LSN since inception – with RESI’s expansion into Europe earlier this year and the upcoming events in Asia, our global network is only getting stronger. Japan boasts the second largest pharmaceutical and medical device markets in the world, and the startup ecosystem is continuing to grow with the support of groups like Life Science Innovation Network Japan (LINK-J), who are actively working to foster open innovation. With close to 320,000 patent applications filed in 2018 (ranking third in the world), Japan continues to be in the forefront of promoting novel innovation – translating this into new company creation among other effective commercialization strategies would be key to the industry’s growth.

â–² Japan – Life Science Cluster Map (source: JETRO, a full chart with detailed descriptions is available here)

In terms of RESI, a significant number of global pharmaceuticals headquartered in Japan have been regularly attending RESI for years, seeking promising technologies for licensing and partnership. We have also seen a steady increase in the number of startups and service providers attending the conferences to seek new business opportunities. LSN looks forward to creating new relationships with leading industry players in Japan, as well as continuing existing relationships with groups that support our activities.

If you are attending BioJapan and interested in meeting, please feel free to contact me at c.jeong@lifesciencenation.com.

VIDEO – Medical Device BD Experts Provide Advice to Early Stage Entrepreneurs

26 Sep

By Lucy Parkinson, VP of Investor Research, LSN

Just like major pharma firms, large medical device corporations are increasingly looking to early stage startups for innovative technologies to bolster their pipelines.  At RESI Boston, four experienced business development executives from the medtech world gathered for a panel to explain how they invest strategically in new technologies.

Moderated by Geoff Dacosta (Director, Business Development and Licensing – Medtronic), the panelists were George Russo (VP, Strategic and Business Development – Hologic), James Kaiser (Director of Venture Capital – HOYA Corporation), and Nick Morwood (Director of Business Development – Philips Healthcare).

While some entrepreneurs might see strategic investors as untethered from the crowd, the panelists noted that they’re affected by the activities of other types of investors such as VCs.  George Russo said that while Hologic doesn’t have an investment fund, they can work alongside startup partners at key stages when capital is hard to come by. “The last mile in medtech – from FDA approval to the marketplace – is where it’s hardest to find investment, and some companies fall into this chasm.”

Nick Morwood discussed the importance of having the right investors at an early stage.  He noted that early stage companies are finding more creative ways to get funded, such as by healthcare systems (Geoff Dacosta also mentioned family offices as an emerging source of investment dollars for medical device startups).  While it can be helpful to have an early investor like a health system that can act as a partner, early adoptor and tester of the technology, it would be a mistake to build too closely to one customer’s specifications rather than addressing a broad market.  James Kaiser also mentioned this issue, saying that it’s important to only take on sophisticated investors who can help your company develop and provide experience and connections that will carry you forward.

One problem Geoff highlighted is that an awful lot of medtech entrepreneurs are interested in talking to a big strategic, but don’t know how best to start that conversation.  Nick stressed the importance of knowing the corporation that you’re targeting; of the early stage companies that reach out to him every day, for many it’s difficult for Nick to understand how they will fit into Philips’ portfolio.  It is helpful if the entrepreneurs do their research and can tell the story of how their product will fit.  Nick suggested that entrepreneurs look at a corporation’s annual reports and new product releases in order to build a story of how their product could be strategically relevant.

George agreed, saying that while early stage science is interesting, that’s where it ends unless you can establish a business relationship.  “Firstly, IP must be buttoned up.  Secondly, you must understand the regulatory path for your product, and preferably have already spoken to the FDA.  Third, you must have a business case that includes a strategy for payment and reimbursement.”

Geoff also asked the panel to describe their expectations for what a company needs to have in place before they reach out – not just from a development perspective, but administratively?  “Rational market projections,” James replied.  “Don’t just say ‘We have a $1 billion market’ – go deeper.  I want to see a rational dive into medial economics and reimbursement.”  To that point, George wants companies to know how their procedure will be coded, and what the current level of reimbursement is.

Investors also raised their appreciation for concise pitches.  “I want a high level deck, not 40 pages of slides that depict the science,” George said.  Nick stressed the importance of having a page in your deck that describes your regulatory and quality control strategy, as both the FDA and Philips’ due diligence process will require attention to these issues.

The final question Geoff put to the panelists was a simple one, which might surprise some entrepreneurs: “Sales vs clinical data – which do you invest in?”  All four investors said that clinical data was their primary focus for assessing an early stage startup, not sales traction.  As Nick pointed out, these corporations already have strong sales teams that they can leverage to sell a new product.  VCs, on the other hand, often focus on sales figures when making medtech investments.  The investors all agreed that for their firms, it was more important to invest in a clinically meaningful asset.

If you missed the panel at RESI, you can watch it here now!  Thank you to all our panelists for participating.

 

Hot Investor Mandate: VC Fund Looks for Opportunities in Digital Health, Technology-Enabled Services, Medical Devices and Diagnostics

26 Sep

A VC firm based in Massachusetts recently raised a fourth fund of $100 million and is structured to make investments ranging from $500,000 to $1 million into companies raising rounds sizes in the $3-5 million range, primarily in Series A and B rounds. The firm also has the ability to provide capital in follow on situations when appropriate through its own resources and its network of syndicates and LPs, all of whom are strategic investors such as healthcare systems, vendors and payers. The firm primarily invests in the Northeastern US although they have also invested in companies throughout the United States.

The firm focuses on healthcare IT, technology enabled services, medical devices and diagnostics companies. The firm is most actively interested in companies in the healthcare IT space and software enabled devices, and they look much more selectively at companies in the medical device and diagnostics spaces. The firm is open to all indications.

The firm looks for privately held companies with experienced management teams. The firm looks to work side by side with entrepreneurs helping them form strategic relationships, recruit management talent, and assemble vital resources necessary for growth.

If you are interested in more information about this investor and other investors tracked by LSN, please email mandates@lifesciencenation.com.