As a managing director at the international asset management firm Hayfin Capital Management, Howard Rowe heads up a team that has provided over $3bn in debt funding to health care companies.
Investor Eye: Howard Rowe, Hayfin Capital Management – The Specialized Health Care Lenders
In this edition of Investor Eye, Medtech Insight meets with Howard Rowe, managing director and head of health care at Hayfin Capital Management, a $17bn international asset management firm headquartered in London.

More from Investor Eye
Sofinnova Partners has played an important role in defining the medtech investment space for the past 50 years, helping bring to market a plethora of life-saving technologies, even when they appear, initially, to be risky.
Each year, Medtech Innovator whittles down a vast number of applicants to a relatively succinct shortlist of companies. Paul Grand, Medtech Innovator’s CEO, spoke to Medtech Insight about this process, as well as some of the broader trends impacting investment in medtech.
When a large medtech company sets up a venture fund, it typically invests in technologies that are adjacent to its pre-existing portfolio. Intuitive Surgical’s approach is different.
Keeping a firm grip on one’s IP is a cornerstone of most innovative businesses. However, Robert Cote, CEO of Cote Capital, believes that if the idea is good enough to keep close, it’s good enough to license out.
More from Business
Vektor Medical is ramping up efforts to bring its vMap technology used to identify arrhythmia sources to more US hospitals, start enrollment in a multinational trial, and commercialize in Europe, pending the CE mark. Medtech Insight sat down with CEO Rob Krummen at LSI 2025 to discuss their plans.
Only 16% of venture capital general partners in Europe are women, and only 9% of those have actual investment power. Thena Capital is aiming to "redefine the image of a venture capitalist."
Early diagnosis can be “detrimental” to patients, Suzanne O'Sullivan, neurologist and author of “The Age of Diagnosis,” argued at the Wired Health conference on 18 March. "You save one life from screening 2,000 women for breast cancer, but you also treat 10 women unnecessarily," she said.