Last week, we
reviewed the IPO market based on data from Burrill & Co.
By the way, Chicagoans will get not one but two chances to
see and hear U.S. biotech guru Steve Burrill this coming week. He will
be featured at the NanoCommerce event at McCormick Place in Chicago on
Tuesday morning and he will co-produce this years iBIOMarketplace event
at Navy Pier on Nov. 2.
Though were now at the end
of October, the PricewaterhouseCoopers MoneyTree report on U.S. venture
capital results for the third quarter of 2005 was just released this
past week. This review of venture capital funding is critical to
understanding the growth of our life sciences sector. Its also a
predictor of our future IPO market.
So what
happened in the third quarter of 2005? Overall results showed U.S
venture capitalists investing almost $5.3 billion in 714 companies or
about $7.4 million per company. How does this compare with other
results this year and last year?
Third-quarter
results were not only strong overall growing 13 percent above last
years level (though lower than the prior quarter) but they were even
stronger for the life science sector. This sector outperformed the
overall results with 20 percent sector growth. Remember that the life
science sector results include not only biotech but also medical
devices.
Year-to-date results (nine months) for
the U.S. for total VC investment were $16.3 billion versus $15.9
billion last year or a growth rate of 3 percent. For the life science
sector, VC investment levels were $4.2 billion or about 26 percent of
the total investment. This level compares to $4.1 billion for last year
or a growth of about 2 percent. It appears that life science venture
investing is picking up in the last part of 2005.
Given that the life science results comprise two very different
segments (biotech and medical devices), lets review how each of these
groups did.
Both the biotech
and medical device segments had outstanding growth for the quarter
(though the medical device segment outperformed the biotech segment
growth). For the nine-month period, the medical device segment
maintained a very high growth rate while biotech segment funding
declined versus last year despite an excellent third quarter.
According to the MoneyTree report, the life science sector
in total had investments in 155 companies in the third quarter for an
average investment size of $10.1 million per company versus total VC
average investment of $7.4 million per company. Another area of
interest to us is the investment by stage of development.
Its clear from the
above that start-up/seed investment stage companies fared poorly in the
third quarter versus the other stages (both in terms of the numbers of
companies and the number of deals).
Its also clear
from the above analysis that its getting harder to attract VC groups to
fund the earliest stage deals. Though not part of this analysis, we
would also need to take a look at national angel investment levels to
get a more complete picture. I would be willing to bet that angel
investment is filling the void left by VC groups (or at least I hope
so).
According to the report, there were 215
companies that received their first-ever round of institutional VC
investment during the third quarter (a total of $1.1 billion or an
average investment of $5.1 million per company). On a nine-month basis,
653 companies received their first VC money in 2005 (a total of $4.0
billion or an average of $6.1 million per company).
In our next edition, we will take a look at Midwest VC
investment. See you next week!
Michael S. Rosen is president of Rosen Bioscience
Management, a company that provides CEO services including financing,
business and corporate development to start-up and early stage life
science companies such as Renovar and Immune Cell Therapy. Rosen is
also a founder and board member of the Illinois Biotechnology Industry
Organization. He can be reached at rosenmichaels@aol.com.
This article has been syndicated on the Wisconsin Technology
Network courtesy of ePrairie, a user-driven business and technology
news community distributed via the Web, the wireless Web and free daily
e-mail newsletters.
The opinions expressed herein
or statements made in the above column are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Wisconsin Technology
Network, LLC. (WTN). WTN, LLC, accepts no legal liability or
responsibility for any claims made or opinions expressed herein.
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