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Device Financings: Recent Growth, Future Opportunities

Executive Summary

In Vivo analyzed recent public and private device financings to determine the comparative strengths and weaknesses of the various types of device financings, and further broke down the investments by therapeutic categories to examine what areas are hot and which ones are not. We found that the device industry has rebounded from a dismal public market and is showing strength among both public and private investors, resulting in a sector well-positioned for continued growth.

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Medical Device and In Vitro Diagnostics/Research Deal Statistics Quarterly, Q2 2008

Highlights from the Q2 2008 review of device and diagnostics dealmaking: financing for medical device firms was down 9% from the first quarter to $838mm, which consisted mainly of late-stage venture rounds at 43% of the total. Big Pharma was surprisingly active in device acquisitions, with Novartis buying 25% of surgical instruments maker Alcon, and BMS selling off ConvaTec to private equity as part of its "string of pearls" strategy to focus on biotech. Two FOPOs dominated the $300mm financing the IVD/Research industry, while Invitrogen's $6.4bn stock swap for Applera's Applied Biosystems represented 90% of the M&A dollar volume.

Medical Device and In Vitro Diagnostics/Research Deal Statistics Quarterly, Q2 2008

Highlights from the Q2 2008 review of device and diagnostics dealmaking: financing for medical device firms was down 9% from the first quarter to $838mm, which consisted mainly of late-stage venture rounds at 43% of the total. Big Pharma was surprisingly active in device acquisitions, with Novartis buying 25% of surgical instruments maker Alcon, and BMS selling off ConvaTec to private equity as part of its "string of pearls" strategy to focus on biotech. Two FOPOs dominated the $300mm financing the IVD/Research industry, while Invitrogen's $6.4bn stock swap for Applera's Applied Biosystems represented 90% of the M&A dollar volume.

China: The Wild, Wild East for Medical Devices

Every medical device company is asking, "How can we take advantage of emerging opportunities in China?" Given the country's economic and population booms--China is home to one fifth the world's population--many analysts expect its medical device market to shortly come into full bloom, enjoying a compound annual growth rate of 15% over the next 10 years from a base of approximately $10 billion in 2007. Fueling this growth are positive improvements in China's business climate, making China a much less risky place to do business. Multinational firms are forming alliances in China to help them reach an untapped 1.3 billion patient population, even as a new breed of venture capital-backed, Western-style Chinese companies begins to grab a home court advantage.

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