Tag Archives: Healthcare

Hot Investor Mandate 3: VC Firm Seeks Investment Opportunities in Digital Health and Medical Device Technologies that Address Problems of Large Unmet Need in Healthcare

28 Jun

A venture capital firm spun out of a leading university looks to provide primarily seed stage financings to companies ranging from $100K – $500k initially with up to $5-6 million provided over the lifetime of the investment. The firm prefers to invest in companies in the Eastern United States but is open to considering companies from around the globe. The firm could make as many as 6-7 investments over the next 6-9 months.

The firm is looking for companies working in sectors of digital health and more selectively medical devices. The firm is only interested in companies that are targeting very larger markets/unmet needs and is not interested in companies that require FDA Approval. The firm is especially interested in companies utilizing software for the optimization of various products and processes within healthcare. The firm is not interested in consumer-facing products.

The firm is very open to working with young entrepreneurs and generally looks to take a board seat following the investment. The firm is looking for companies with the potential to become very large organizations capable of being worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

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

Active Healthcare Investors and Strategic Partners Are Attending RESI San Diego

8 Jun

By Dennis Ford, Founder & CEO, Life Science Nation; Creator of RESI Conference Series

Life Science Nation (LSN) and Johnson and Johnson Innovation, JLABS have launched San Diego’s first Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) Conference on June 19th, 2017 during the 2017 BIO week when the biotech and medtech world gathers in San Diego. RESI San Diego will bring together 400+ fundraising CEOs and 400+ early stage investors (a 1:1 ratio) from around the globe, providing the opportunity for dialogue and relationship building, with the goal of eventual capital allocations. Register for RESI now.

RESI San Francisco Panel Announcement: Tech Giants in Healthcare

29 Dec

By Michael Quigley, VP of Market Research, LSN

mike-2

Large technology companies have been expanding their footprint in the healthcare sector through venture investment and partnerships into early stage healthcare companies. Often seeking technology with a significant software component, many of these groups have helped to fuel the massive growth that has been seen in the digital health space in the past few years. From patient monitoring devices to mobile 3D imaging devices the lines between pure tech and healthcare are slowly beginning to blur as healthcare providers continually look to improve care while lowering costs.

Moderated by Michael Greeley, General Partner, Flare Capital Partners, the panelists are:

  • Iana Dimkova, Senior Associate, Healthcare, GE Ventures
  • Lucian Iancovici, FACHE, Head of Qualcomm Life Fund, Qualcomm Ventures
  • Rich Wilmot, Head of Corporate Venturing, Philips
  • Ying Tam, Head, Digital Health Cluster, Venture Services, MaRS

In this session, a number of investors at these large firms will discuss their involvement in healthcare innovation ecosystem. What types of technologies they are interested in? How much data do they like to see pre-investment? What problems in the space are they looking to tackle? These questions and more will be answered at RESI on Jan 10th so if you’re looking to partner with a large tech company for your product this is a panel you don’t want to miss.

Panel Announcement: Big Data in Healthcare

20 Oct

By Christine A. Wu, Senior Research Analyst, LSN

chrsitine

LSN is pleased to publish its first panel announcement for RESI SF 2017: Big Data in Healthcare. On January 10th, a panel of five expert healthcare investors will speak regarding why they’re looking for big data investment opportunities, how they identify technologies that will have an impact on the healthcare system landscape, and what early-stage fundraising companies in this exciting new vertical can do to get a foot in their doors.

The Big Data in Healthcare panel will comprise of the following panelists:

The big data space has increasingly become exciting with its potential to transform healthcare through its cross-correlation of a number of broad applications – computer vision, machine learning, patient medical records, disease diagnoses, mental health trends and proposed therapies, as well as many other spaces in healthcare. If you haven’t yet, be sure to register now for this tremendous educational opportunity in this booming space, while also having the chance to meet valuable investors in-person.

162801425610010374

resi-san-francisco-2017

RESI does Toronto, where health means business. Lots of it.

14 Apr

By Dianne Carmichael, Managing Director, Health Innovation & Venture Services, MaRS Discovery District

Dianne-Carmichael

The Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) Conference is going abroad for the first time. RESI on MaRS will take place on June 23rd in Toronto, the heart of Canada’s financial and health industries, where early stage investment in life sciences and digital health is on the cusp of a major breakthrough.

Take the launch of Johnson & Johnson’s JLABS @ Toronto in May — also a first outside the United States, and in the very same building RESI will take place, the 1.5-million-square-foot building that is MaRS Discovery District. Or the recently announced centre for advanced therapeutic cell technologies, the first of its kind in the world, which is also moving into MaRS thanks to a $40-million collaboration between the government of Canada, GE Healthcare and the Centre for Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine (CCRM).

These initiatives offer a glimpse of how major strategic firms and investors in the health sector are recognizing the Toronto area’s resources, including the region’s pool of skilled talent, its recognized high quality of life, its world-class health research institutions, its strong entrepreneurial culture, and the generous tax incentives available for R&D locally.

While local early stage investing in life sciences picked up last year, venture capital players are still few and far between in Canada. Total venture deal activity for Canada’s life sciences sector hit $511 million (all values in Canadian dollars) for the first nine months of 2015 — a jump from $422.5 million the year before. Canadian companies closing major deals during 2015 included Highland Therapeutics ($50 million) and Trillium Therapeutics ($55.2 million). Another three Canadian life sciences companies collectively cut deals worth $114 million in 2015 — Clementia Pharmaceuticals ($60 million), Northern Biologics (US$30 million) and Profound Medical ($24 million).

Early stage investors active in the Canadian health sector are also tapping into medical devices and the digital health sector, which includes consumer apps that help people manage their own health. Toronto, already known as the City of Apps, is particularly poised to take advantage of the crossover between health and digital technologies that is fuelling innovation in wearables. Precision medicine and robotics are some of the other areas gaining traction in the Canadian investment scene.

The intersection between 3D printing and health is also taking off with Autodesk Toronto and their award-winning research division moving to MaRS, the fastest growing technology and medical research community in Canada. There are over 100 researchers at Autodesk global, 60 of them based in Toronto. This team is already breaking new ground using 3D-printing technology to develop low-cost, prosthetic limb sockets and build highly realistic human models for biomechanical simulation and research. Future developments include 3D bioprinting: the production of living cells from simple tissues to complete organs. The market for this is expected to reach $2.84 billion globally by 2022 and Canada is poised to be a leading player.

Canada is also home to a diverse variety of early stage investment sources. In addition to VC firms such as Lumira Capital, Genesys Capital, Versant Ventures Canada and CTI Life Sciences, Canada also has many other types of active investors. The local angel investment community is becoming more active in the health sector, and many institutional investors already have a strong presence. That is the case of the heavyweight Caisse de Dépôt et Placement du Québec, which manages public and private pension funds.

Canada is also experiencing a rise in capital for health startups from the social impact and venture philanthropy investment trend, which Canada is pioneering. Virgin Unite, Richard Branson’s foundation that links innovators and entrepreneurial ideas to challenge tough issues and improve peoples’ lives, has just recently partnered with the MaRS Centre for Impact Investing to launch the MaRS Catalyst Fund. One third of this early-stage, cross-Canada direct investment fund will be put toward the health sector.

As interest ramps up on the early stage investmenet front, MaRS is growing its support for entrepreneurs, including expanding its team of advisors with experience in early stage investment. This includes a health entrepreneur advisory board chaired by Stefan Larsen, CEO of Northern Biologics, to support accelerating companies that can scale globally.

The graph is trending upwards in Toronto’s early stage health investment sector. RESI on MaRS will welcome innovators and investors from around the globe to engage in the heart of Canada’s rising health innovation hub in Toronto.

RESI-Toronto-2016

RESI Panel Announcement: Healthcare System Partners

31 Mar

By Shaoyu Chang, MD, MPH, Senior Research Manager, LSN

Shaoyu 10*10

The RESI team is pleased to debut a new panel on Healthcare System Partners at RESI@TMCx on April 11. In an article titled “Innovation as Discipline, Not Fad,” the New England Journal of Medicine called on healthcare organizations to embrace innovations and serve as the training ground to test their medical benefits, technical feasibility, and business viability. Many healthcare systems are doing just that. This panel will reveal the changing role healthcare organizations are playing in fostering innovation.

Moderated by Rebecca Kaul, Chief Innovation Officer, MD Anderson, this session will feature:

From innovation centers to investment vehicles, healthcare organizations have become critical partners for entrepreneurs. Whether you are considering generating user experience, conducting pilot studies, or receiving technical guidance, the value of face-to-face meetings with these institutions is unfathomable. At the heart of the world’s largest medical center, this panel will help entrepreneurs navigate complex healthcare systems and bring their companies to the next milestone.

Registering for the RESI Conference will give you the opportunity to listen to this panel live, connect with relevant investors and network with like-minded entrepreneurs.

RESI-Houston-2016_600

Hot Life Science Investor Mandate 2: Health Insurance Provider Seeking Shipping Medical Devices/Diagnostics

10 Jul

A US based Health Insurance Provider makes investments in healthcare companies from an evergreen investment fund.  Allocation sizes are highly varied, but are most often $3-5 million.  While the firm is open to opportunities globally, the organization only invests in companies that are targeting the US healthcare market (including companies with products that have been commercialized in other markets and are seeking capital to expand into the US market).

The firm invests in transformative medical technologies that will lower the cost of care provision, and has previously made investments in healthcare IT and in wearable sensors for elderly patients.  The firm only invests in companies that have attained regulatory approval for their products, or which do not require approval.  The fund does not invest in therapeutics, but is open to investing in diagnostic technologies that will lower the cost of care.  In the medical device sector, the firm is generally not interested in invasive devices such as implantable.

While the firm is open to investing in any indication area, the firm’s focus is on population health and the firm is therefore primarily interested in indications with a large number of patients, including cancer, diseases of the nervous system, and diabetes.

The firm invests in both pre-revenue companies and companies with existing revenues, but does not invest in companies that still face regulatory barriers to attaining revenue.  The firm has long-term horizons for investment.

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