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Venture Firms See Signs of Rebirth in Life Sciences

25.09.2012 -

Life-sciences and health investing, long shunned by venture-capital investors, is making a comeback.

Several venture firms globally have each raised or are raising funds this year in the $200 million to $400 million range dedicated to life sciences, biotech and medicine, while others have raised large, diversified funds with big chunks dedicated to those fields.

Venture capitalists are taking that money and pushing it into several life-sciences and health-related fields. Last year, venture backers invested $4.82 billion in biotechnology, up 24% from 2010. Medical-devices venture investment rose 17% last year, and healthcare services rose 41%.

A handful of big acquisitions, new U.S. laws that could speed up drug approval in key areas, and a broader definition of what investors think belongs in those funds are helping to breathe life into the highly cyclical sector, investors say.

Health and biotechnology start-ups need every boost they can get.

Such companies rarely produce blockbuster initial public offerings. For biotechnology in particular, products have to clear high regulatory hurdles and often take over a decade to get to market. The failure rate is high.

Last year, Morgenthaler Ventures and Advanced Technology Ventures spun off their life-sciences investment teams and merged them into an independent group. The group, Lightstone Ventures, is raising a fund of at least $200 million, according to a person familiar with the situation who asked not to be named because fund details are not yet public. Scale Venture Partners said last year it would stop investing in healthcare.

But the firms that remain in the field say they see hope.

Earlier this year Celgene bought venture-backed drugmaker Avila Therapeutics for $350 million, a price tag that could rise to $925 million if Avila meets certain milestones.

Last year, Daiichi Sankyo bought drugmaker Plexxikon for $805 million, which could rise to $935 million if Plexxikon achieves certain milestones.

Big drugmakers see early-stage venture investing as a proxy for expensive in-house drug development. In part because the relative paucity of venture activity in biotech has raised concerns about the long-term product pipeline, they are increasingly investing directly alongside traditional venture investors.

Established companies "can invest in that innovation with a portion of the dollars they would have invested in their own R&D," said Marty Waters, a lawyer at Wilson Sonsini who helps arrange investments in the area.

Some have set up their own venture funds, as Merck & Co did last year when it created its $250 million Merck Research Venture Fund, joining several other major drugmakers with venture arms.

Those moves are in turn helping to encourage remaining venture-capital firms in the field. This year, the funds raised or being raised include Frazier Healthcare Ventures' $400 million fund, Longitude Ventures' $331 million fund, and a $200 million fund from Index Ventures, GlaxoSmithKline, and Johnson & Johnson.

In addition, generalist firms are raising funds with a heavy life-sciences focus, such as a $600 million fund from Canaan Partners, a $270 million fund from Flagship Ventures, and a $2.5 billion fund from New Enterprise Associates.

Partners say there is a sense that because so many firms have succumbed to the challenges and exited life sciences, the ones that remain will have a better shot at success.

Previously, "too much money was chasing too few deals," said Brent Ahrens of Canaan Partners. "If the too-much-money part goes away, that's likely to improve the ecosystem."

Big ideas, no glitz

Few expect life sciences overall will see the heady gains of the 1990s. And because the field doesn't produce glitzy companies, it will never attract the buzz that a sector such as the consumer Internet has enjoyed in recent years.

"This isn't Facebook or Zynga," said James Topper of Frazier. "Over the past 10 years, biotech returns have been steadier than in tech. But you don't have a 100-times fund in biotech like you do in tech," he said, referring to a return of 100 times or more that a few funds have enjoyed as a result of giant scores on companies such as Google and Facebook .

But the different character of life-sciences start-ups is precisely the appeal for many investors. "Every therapeutic idea or product is a big idea," said Kevin Kinsella of Avalon Ventures, which just raised a $200 million life sciences and technology fund. "In technology, until proven otherwise, every idea is a small idea."

Meanwhile, lawmakers and regulators in Washington are working to speed up the approval process for drugs that could lead to breakthroughs in life-threatening diseases - and many investors hope that could in turn speed return on investment.

Some venture firms are also broadening the types of businesses they consider part of the life-sciences field, with ventures that apply information technology to healthcare problems of particular interest.

"There's been more of a consumer-Internet focus," said Annie Lamont of Oak Investment Partners, summing up the attitude as "let's take the consumer Internet and apply it to healthcare."

Oak backs companies such as Castlight, which allows patients to compare costs for medical procedures. The company recently closed a $100 million funding round and is considered an IPO prospect for 2013.

Other venture-backed companies that fit that mold include ZocDoc, which automates appointment booking; 23andMe, which allows customers to test and learn about their DNA; and medical-records company Practice Fusion.

Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers recently joined Mohr Davidow Ventures, Aberdare Ventures and the Mayo Clinic as a partner in Rock Health, a program that seeks to foster start-ups that specialize in healthcare-related apps. Rock Health's first class of 35 start-ups graduated last month.

Even traditional healthcare services can sometimes produce venture-capital-style returns. When Universal Health Services acquired psychiatric-facility operator Ascend Health for $500 million in June, Polaris Venture Partners said it stood to earn $115 million, or 10 times the firm's investment.