The biotechnology sector looks likely to be hit by a wave of bankruptcies and failures as small companies find themselves out of funding and out of options.
On Thursday, Cell Genesys Inc (CEGE.O: Quote, Profile, Research), which was formed 20 years ago to focus on gene and cell therapies, said it is considering its alternatives, including liquidation of the company, after its experimental prostate cancer drug failed a late stage trial.
Last week, 15-year-old Atherogenics Inc filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection due to an intolerable debt burden that hampered development of its experimental diabetes drug. This week the company's shares were delisted from Nasdaq.
"These are old-school biotech names," said Christopher Raymond, an analyst at Robert W. Baird. "Usually such names can get funding at some level, or someone will buy them before that, so it is very unusual and represents another data point showing that things are not peaches and cream."
The pain being felt by biotech companies who find themselves shut out of the capital markets, or who suffer the blow of a failed product, represents an opportunity for pharmaceuticals companies, which need new drugs to fill their pipelines as major products lose patent protection.
John Lechleiter, the chief executive of drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co (LLY.N: Quote, Profile, Research), said in an interview that his company plans to take advantage of the desperation in the sector to make further acquisitions, even as it executes its recent $6.5 billion acquisition of ImClone Systems Inc (IMCL.O: Quote, Profile, Research), which makes the cancer drug Erbitux.
"Certainly traditional sources of funding and the traditional capital markets that biotech companies have accessed are withering right now," he said. "I think you can expect us to be opportunistic."
Over the past two years, shares of small cap biotech stocks, defined as those with a market value of less than $500 million, have fallen an average of 30 percent. Shares of the large-cap biotechs have risen 25 to 30 percent over the same period.
See Original Article
Call now for help with corporate debts.
Call us on: 0800 071 1616
Email us on: info@debtsgone.co.uk
Website: www.debtsgone.co.uk
Showing posts with label Biotechs confront bankruptcy as funding evaporates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biotechs confront bankruptcy as funding evaporates. Show all posts
Friday, 17 October 2008
Posted by Debtsgone LTD at Friday, October 17, 2008 0 comments
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(20)
-
▼
January
(20)
- THE Scottish Government has seriously underestimat...
- A Derbyshire travel firm has gone into voluntary l...
- Four out of five UK suppliers may have to write of...
- CANADA – Quebec employment minister Sam Hamad has ...
- The Business and Enterprise Regulatory Reform (BER...
- The company behind the controversial Lapland New F...
- The last Woolworths stores closed their doors yest...
- Insolvency accountants who chase up small council ...
- The Tales of Robin Hood has cancelled a school tri...
- As we have covered on a number of occasions of lat...
- Creditors of NHS Foundation Trusts that go bust co...
- The economic recession has claimed another major s...
- Students looking forward to graduating in 2009 m...
- Staff at Borcombe SP have been sent home and the c...
- Hundreds of high street retailers will collapse ne...
- The level of debt in the UK is "disturbing," the h...
- More than 10 national or regional retail chains ri...
- QUARTERLY rent bills, due for payment at the end o...
- Woodco Scotland Ltd has ceased trading while credi...
- Happy New Year!!!!Call now for help with corporate...
-
▼
January
(20)