Celtic Pharma Sees a Role for Private Equity in Biotech

The recently launched private equity firm Celtic Pharma aims to bridge the gap between biotech companies that have trouble financing R&D for mid- to late-stage projects and the Big Pharma firms desperate to rebuild their pipelines. The group's first fund, at around $1 billion, aims to bring together approximately 20 late-stage projects, take each through to regulatory approval, and license them out to the highest bidder.

If you're after novelty in drug development, suggests Stephen Evans-Freke, of late the managing general partner of the recently launched private equity group Celtic Pharma, gloss over Big Pharma pipelines and direct your attention to the biotech sector. Given the pharmaceutical sector can ill afford to attempt to make up for significant revenue losses from patent expiries with life-cycle management products in today's economic climate, this should be good news for the biotech industry. But the bad news: for the vast majority of biotechnology firms that are not profitable, even those with mid- or late-stage clinical projects, financing R&D to the point where the most value can be extracted from these projects is increasingly difficult.

For the subset of these companies that have floated, raising capital remains difficult; most have no institutional research coverage—an unintended...

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