Tag Archives: Toronto

Life Science Nation Scores A “Hat Trick” with the Third RESI in Toronto – April 10th at MaRS Discovery District

18 Jan

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

LSN is pleased to announce that RESI on MaRS is on schedule to land in Toronto April 10th, and JLABS and MaRS Discovery District will be the Title Sponsors. The big news here is that this event will be larger from an international perspective than previous RESI on MaRS events. The global early stage life science investor and partnering community has stepped up efforts to source technology assets throughout North America, and Toronto has a trove of up and coming startups across the domains of drugs, devices, diagnostics, and healthcare IT.

LSN has built a compelling group of investors and strategic partners (dubbed “the tribe”) that use the RESI conferences as a vehicle to source and vet new technologies. These investors all have a mandate to allocate capital resources in order to fill their portfolios and product pipelines and expand their global channels. LSN has already seen very strong interest from investors based in Asia, Europe and the U.S., who are vying for panel slots at the upcoming conference. RESI’s panels will feature investors from Asia-based pharma and strategics, global family offices, venture capital firms, angel syndicates, private equity, corporate venture, foundations and impact funds. The market is heating up for early stage technology, and 2018 looks like it will be a banner year for dynamic global partnerships.

Last year, RESI on MaRS hosted over 250 Canadian and international investors who participated over 900 meetings with fundraising CEOs and scientist-entrepreneurs in one day. These investors went to Toronto with mandates for investment and indeed fostered relationships that led to deals. Part of RESI on MaRS is the Innovation Challenge which will feature 30 top life science startups that has become a major draw for the investors that attend the event. The Innovation Challenge showcases these local startups on a global stage.

MaRS and JLABS will work together to showcase best-of-breed technology to the global players at this event. RESI is also part of the Toronto Health Innovation Week, which features a bevy of activity over the course of five days, leveraging the fact that RESI on MaRS will bring in the global players. Looking forward to seeing you on MaRS!

Also Offering Premier Partnering Plus

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

MaRS Collaborates with Life Science Nation and Johnson & Johnson Innovation to Host RESI in Toronto

12 Apr

TORONTO – April 12, 2016 – MaRS Discovery District (MaRS) is collaborating with Life Science Nation (LSN) and Johnson & Johnson Innovation, JLABS (JLABS) to bring the Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) Conference to Toronto on June 23, 2016.

The RESI Conference series brings together fundraising CEOs and early stage investors from around the globe, providing the opportunity for dialogue and relationship building, with the goal of eventual capital allocations.

“MaRS supports over 250 Canadian-grown early stage health technology startups,” said Dianne Carmichael, managing director, health innovation & venture services at MaRS. “Our goal is to provide these young emerging ventures with the best connections to investors and industry to help them scale internationally. The Redefining Early Stage Investment (RESI) conference series has a strong track record of attracting global early stage investors. We’re delighted to bring them to MaRS this summer to build on the success of our HealthKick conferences.”

RESI on MaRS will connect cutting-edge health technologies with a broad audience of investors and industry leaders, including: angel syndicates, private wealth firms, corporate venture capitalists, venture philanthropy groups, foundations and endowments, big pharma and virtual pharma companies, mid-level private equity firms, government organizations, and venture capital investors. The conference will also include 16 panel sessions with pharmaceutical, medical device, biotech, consumer health and healthcare IT investors.

The annual MaRS HealthKick Innovation Challenge will happen this year as part of RESI on MaRS. The Dragons’ Den-like Challenge sets 30 selected companies up to demonstrate their technology and business while competing for prizes in a full-day exhibition to investors and potential partners.

“The MaRS Centre in Toronto represents the 4th venue for our North American RESI Conference series. Now fundraising CEOs and scientist entrepreneurs can meet investors every 90 days — Boston took place in September (RESI Boston), San Francisco in January (RESI @ JPM), Houston is in April (RESI @ TMCx) and now Toronto in June (RESI on MaRS),” said Dennis Ford, CEO at LSN and creator of the RESI Conference Series.

Speakers and participating health ventures will be announced in April.

About MaRS Discovery District

MaRS Discovery District in Toronto is one of the world’s largest urban innovation hubs, supporting a new generation of makers and innovators who aim to make the world a better place by creating solutions that address key societal challenges. It is a community that encourages entrepreneurial thinking through education programs and events, and helps startups launch, grow and scale. MaRS supports over 1,000 ventures.

About Life Science Nation

Life Science Nation (LSN) accelerates the funding of early stage life science firms through its Match.com-like sourcing platform for private investment and enables CEOs to be more efficient in their capital-raising efforts. LSN owns and operates the Redefining Early Stage Investments (RESI) conference series.

For more information, please contact the RESI Team at resi@lifesciencenation.com or 617-600-0668