Imperial Innovations — Update 10 March 2016

Imperial Innovations — Update 10 March 2016

Imperial Innovations

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Imperial Innovations

A flurry of activity to start 2016

Financing and investments

Pharma & biotech

11 March 2016

Price

409.63p

Market cap

£649m

Net cash (£m)
at 30 July 2015

99.4
(excludes £100m new issue)

Shares in issue

158.5m

Free float

10.5%

Code

IVO

Primary exchange

AIM

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

(2.1)

(4.2)

(16.4)

Rel (local)

(7.9)

(2.8)

(8.6)

52-week high/low

525.00p

341.25p

Business description

Imperial Innovations is a technology transfer, incubation and venture investment company. It invests in ventures from Imperial College London, Cambridge and Oxford universities and UCL. Over 90% of its portfolio value is in 20 companies, with the majority (c 70%) in healthcare.

Next events

H116 interims

April 2016

Circassia: Cat-SPIRE Phase III data

Q216

Circassia: Grass-SPIRE Phase III start

H116

PsiOxus: CMD-003 Phase II CITADEL data end 2016/early 2017.

Q416/ H117

Analysts

Lala Gregorek

+44 (0)20 3681 2527

Christian Glennie

+44 (0)20 3077 5727

Imperial Innovations is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

2016 has started at a rapid pace for Imperial Innovations (IVO), with a flurry of investments into its portfolio companies, a major strengthening of its relationship with UCL (University College London) and the raising of £100m via a new share issue (23.5m shares at 425p). Having significantly increased the frequency and level of portfolio investment in FY15, the availability of fresh funds suggest the rapid investment rate will continue (we estimate £70m in FY16 and FY17), which should help to bring potential valuation inflection points and/or ‘exits’ (IPO/M&A) into view.

Year end

Net portfolio value (£m)*

Cash**

(£m)

Net fair value gain (£m)

Net asset value (£m)

NAV/share (p)

DPS

(p)

07/14

252.0

176.5

40.5

404.8

295.1

0.0

07/15

327.2

128.1

21.3

420.1

306.3

0.0

07/16e

393.2

144.4

(4.0)

506.0

314.9

0.0

07/17e

478.2

92.4

15.0

512.3

318.8

0.0

Note: *Net value, excludes provisions. **Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments.

Premium issue with strong shareholder support

IVO successfully raised £100m gross (£97.5m net estimate) on 4 February, through the placing of 23.5m new shares at 425p, an 8% premium to the prior day mid-market closing price. IVO’s major institutional shareholders all participated, accounting for 87% of the raise (Woodford 56%, Invesco 25%, Lansdowne 7%). When added to the £91.6m held at 29 January 2016 (IVO reported) and the £50m EIB loan facility (undrawn), Innovations has c £239m available for investment.

Accelerating investment rate

Having invested £60.8m into 30 portfolio companies (including six new) during FY15 (vs £32.8m into 25 companies in FY14), Innovations has so far invested/committed £41.4m in FY16 (since 1 August 2015) and added six new companies to the portfolio. Significant recent investments include £11.3m committed to the £60m raised by Mission Therapeutics, £10m towards the £31.5m Series A for Inivata, and £6.9m committed into the £13.5m funding round by Precision Ocular.

Strengthening university bonds

Central to IVO’s long-term investment case is its ability to access some of the best innovative technologies emerging from the UK’s leading academic institutions. As such, the £24.75m recently committed to the new UCL Technology Fund (effectively securing an option on top ideas from University College London), and the £3.3m committed to the Apollo Therapeutics Fund (which covers tech transfer from Imperial College London, UCL and Cambridge University) are significant developments.

Valuation: Investments support NAV premium

IVO’s shares trade at a c 30% premium to our estimated FY16e NAV of 315p/share (at 31 July 2016), after adjusting for the recent capital raise and disclosed portfolio performance. We believe this is a relatively modest premium based on historical performance, and the prospect of significant value uplifts over the next few years as a result of investments being made across a range of maturing companies.

Unlocking hidden portfolio value

Imperial Innovations’ focus on ‘putting capital to work’ has seen significantly increased investment across its portfolio of maturing and rapidly emerging companies. £60.8m was invested into 30 portfolio companies during FY15 (vs £32.8m in FY14 across 25 companies), and £41.4m has been invested, or committed, so far in FY16 (since 1 August 2015).

As of 31 December 2015 the portfolio consisted of 103 companies, with a net portfolio value of £347.2m (vs £327.2m at 31 July 2015). The £20m portfolio uplift was comprised of investments of £21.2m across 14 companies, less disposals of £0.1m and fair value losses of £1.1m. Since 31 December, and excluding the recently committed investments in Precision Ocular (£6.9m) and Aqdot (£3m), Innovations reports that it invested a further £10.3m into the portfolio. This was offset by £0.9m of impairments in the unquoted portfolio, and a £7.6m reduction in the quoted portfolio (mainly affected by the wider biotech market sell-off), such that the estimated net portfolio value as of 4 February 2016 had increased slightly to £349m.

Fresh funding to support investment rate

Following the £100m (gross) equity raise and with c £239m now available for investment, we see the current investment rate increasing further, such that we now estimate £70m in portfolio investments in FY16 (vs £60m previously). We expect the bulk of investment to be made into the maturing portfolio of unquoted companies, which typically holds greatest potential for unlocking nearer-term hidden value through M&A or IPO. These companies include the likes of Cell Medica, PsiOxus Therapeutics and Veryan Medical, which secured significant investments in FY15 (see Exhibit 1) and are advancing their technologies and products to pivotal stages of development (see Exhibit 2).

Exhibit 1: Key healthcare funding rounds in FY15

Company

Total funding (£m)

Cash invested by IVO (£m)

IVO commitment (£m)

Net fair value gain (£m)

Cell Medica

50

7.5

15

5.6

PsiOxus

25

6.2

7.0

8.5

Veryan Medical

18

2.7

8.4

N/A

Source: Edison Investment Research, Imperial Innovations

Exhibit 2: Upcoming healthcare company catalysts

Company

Carrying value

(31 July 2015)

IVO stake (%)

Description

Next newsflow/catalyst

Cell Medica

21.04

27.0

Developing T-cell immunotherapy for treatment of virally associated cancer and viral infection post-bone marrow transplant. Cytovir CMV is available in the UK. Lead cancer immunotherapy product is CMD-003.

CMD-003 Phase II CITADEL trial initiated – results expected end 2016/early 2017.

Commercial cell therapy manufacturing at Berlin facility has commenced, focused on Cytovir CMV.

Expansion of oncology pipeline.

PsiOxus

22.62

27.9

Developing novel therapies for cancer-related diseases: an oncolytic virus Enadenotucirev (ColoAd1) for solid tumours, AbEnAd (antibody-armed-Enadenotucirev) and Espindaolol (MT-102) for cachexia.

Phase I SPICE trial initiated combining enadenotucirev with pembrolizumab a checkpoint inhibitor (anti-PDL-1 MAb) in metastatic colorectal cancer – results expected 2017.

Develop AbEnAd through preclinical studies, while seeking partnerships – announce study start and/or partnership.

Veryan Medical

20.89

48.2

3D helical stent for peripheral vascular use. Positive 24-month clinical study data vs market comparator.

Secured distribution agreement for BioMimics 3D stent with Biosensors International for ex-US launch.

MIMICS-2 FDA PMA study enrolling – initial data expected end-2017 and PMA approval in 2018.

Source: Edison Investment Research, Imperial Innovations

Meanwhile the substantial investments recently made into Mission, Inivata and Precision Ocular, all relatively early-stage companies in terms of technology/product status, also show a flexibility to make appropriate investments across the full spectrum of the portfolio. These investments (or committed investments) and other portfolio company investments made so far in FY16 (ie since 31 July 2015) are summarised in Exhibit 3. Of particular note, the £60m committed to Mission Therapeutics is Innovations’ fourth portfolio company to raise over £40m in a single private funding round, and is substantially higher than the $25m average series C round for a European biotech company in 2015 (EvaluatePharma1). We assume the recent financing round in Mission was equivalent to a series C, although technically not referred to as such; the last disclosed financing was a £20m series B.

  EP Vantage: As venture capital flows freely, Europe's haves and have nots emerge; 19 January 2016.

Exhibit 3: Investments in FY16 (31 July 2015 onwards)

Date

Company

IVO investment (total raise)

IVO stake*

Description

Feb 2016

Precision Ocular

£6.9m (£13.5m)

28.5%

£13.5m funding round alongside existing investors Consort Medical, NeoMed and Hovione Scientia. Retinal implant technology for safer/better delivery of ophthalmic drugs.

Feb 2016

Aqdot

£3m (£5m)

46.5%

£5m series A funding round, alongside Cambridge Enterprise, Parkwalk Advisors and Providence Investment. Technology to encapsulate/protect/release active ingredients across range of sectors; initial focus on household products, fragrances, with future applications in agrochemicals/pharmaceuticals.

Feb 2016

Mission Therapeutics

£11.3m (£60m)

21.6%

£60m funding round, led by IVO and new investor, Woodford Patient Capital Trust, alongside existing shareholders Sofinnova Partners, SR One, Roche Venture Fund and Pfizer Venture Investments. Pre-clinical development of deubiquitinating (DUBs) enzyme inhibitors to treat cancer/neurodegenerative/other diseases.

Jan 2016

Inivata

£10m (£31.5m)

30.6%

£31.5m series A round, alongside existing investors Cambridge Innovation Capital, J&J Innovation, and new investor Woodford Patient Capital Trust. Inivata is developing circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) analysis technology to improve cancer diagnosis using a simple blood test (‘liquid biopsy’).

Jan 2016

Import.io

Not disclosed (ND)

ND

$13m series A with Wellington Partners, Oxford Capital, Open Ocean, Delin Capital & AME Cloud Ventures. Proprietary technology converting websites into usable data.

Dec 2015

Kesios Therapeutics

£6m (£19m)

42%

£19m Series A round alongside co-investors SV Life Sciences and Abingworth.

Dec 2015

WaveOptics

ND

ND

“‘Multi-million pound” funding round, alongside Robert Bosch Venture Capital, Octopus Ventures, angel investors and Blippar. Augmented Reality technology display developer.

Oct 2015

Telectica

£1.3m (£1.5m)

18.3%

£1.5m seed funding round alongside angel investors. Artificial Intelligence technology to build insights into professional networks from interpreting web content.

Oct 2015

Puridify

(£2.2m; IVO not disclosed)

ND

£2.2m series A round, alongside existing investors SR One and UCL Business. Developer of novel bioprocessing purification technologies for industrial biomolecule manufacture.

Sep 2015

Silicon Microgravity

ND

ND

Seed investment in Sep 2015; followed by $3m funding round in Feb 2016 led by IVO with support from Cambridge Enterprise and UK government grant. Sensor development for oil and gas industry (reservoir management).

Aug 2015

Garrison Technology

(£2m; IVO not disclosed)

ND

£2m seed round alongside angel investors. Cyber security.

Aug 2015

Oxford Biotrans

£1.25m (£2.5m)

41%

£2.5m Series A alongside existing (IP Group / University of Oxford) and new investors (Oxford Innovation & Technology & EIS Fund and De Monchy Aromatics). Commercialisation of biocatalytic processes for production of high value speciality chemicals.

Aug 2015

Orthonika

£150k

ND

£150k seed funding alongside angel investors. Novel knee meniscus replacement.

Source: Imperial Innovations, Edison Investment Research. Note: *IVO stake at deal date. Shading indicates new portfolio companies.

Novel technology sweet spot

Within the healthcare portfolio, the products/technologies being developed by Mission, Inivata and Precision Ocular demonstrate the sweet spot combination of innovation, market need and potential for disruptive technologies that Innovations seeks.

Mission is an early-stage drug discovery company focused on developing selective inhibitors of deubiquitinating (DUBs) enzymes. DUBs are involved in multiple cellular processes, including DNA damage and cell proliferation, so the inhibition of these enzymes holds potential to treat cancer and other unmet medical needs, including neurodegenerative disease, muscle wasting and infectious disease. Mission is not aware of any DUB inhibitors currently in clinical development, so the recent funding will help to accelerate the development of a series of first-in-class small molecule drugs candidates, targeting specific DUBs, into early clinical development.

Inivata is a cancer genomics company working in the burgeoning field of ‘liquid biopsies’, the concept that a simple blood test can be analysed to help diagnose multiple cancers, triage patient treatment options and monitor treatment response. Inivata’s technology is based on circulating DNA analysis (ctDNA) to detect and analyse genomic material from a cancer patient's cell-free, circulating tumour DNA collected from a blood sample. The fresh funds will be used to accelerate clinical studies to demonstrate the clinical benefits of Inivata’s technology.

Precision Ocular’s technology is focused on the optimum delivery and distribution of existing and new ophthalmic therapeutic agents, with the aim of increasing efficacy while reducing side-effects and minimising frequency of treatment. A wide range of retinal diseases are targeted, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic macular edema (DME), retinal vein occlusion (RVO), uveitis and cystoid macular edema (CME). Notable co-investors in the financing round are Consort Medical and Hovione Scientia, specialists in the field of drug-delivery devices and particle engineering/drug encapsulation, respectively, with which Precision already has development collaborations. The funding will be used to develop novel candidates before proceeding into human clinical studies.

Stronger academic ties

As a technology commercialisation and venture investment company, Innovations’ ability to replenish its portfolio of innovative technology companies via its primary/preferred partner status with some of the UK’s leading academic institutions is critical to the group’s long-term future. Operating almost exclusively within the so-called ‘golden triangle’ between London, Oxford and Cambridge (in the UK), Innovations has substantially strengthened its ties with University College London (UCL) and Cambridge University through two recent initiatives, to bolster its core collaboration with Imperial College, London.

UCL Technology Fund

In January 2016, Innovations announced that it had committed £24.75m to a new UCL Technology Fund, the first investment fund that UCL has created to commercialise its research. Innovations’ investment will be matched by the European Investment Fund, creating a total fund of £50m to invest over a five-year period, via early-stage proof of concept funding, licensing opportunities and the formation of spin-out companies within life sciences (not therapeutics) and physical sciences. The fund will be managed by Albion Ventures, a UK venture capital investor, while the UCL’s technology transfer company, UCL Business (UCLB), will be the technical advisor to the fund.

As a limited partner in the fund, Innovations now has visibility of potential intellectual property from across UCL’s research base, and will be offered co-investment opportunities or first-refusal rights to invest in projects that the fund decides not to invest in. As such, in addition to its £24.75m commitment to the fund, Innovations expects to also have opportunities to make direct investments into selected UCLB spin-outs that fit its technology and growth profile.

Apollo Therapeutics Fund

Also in January 2016, Innovations announced that it had committed £3.3m to a new £40m joint venture between AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson and the technology transfer offices of three top UK universities (Imperial College London, UCL and Cambridge University), namely Innovations, UCLB and Cambridge Enterprise, respectively. The so-called Apollo Therapeutics Fund is a significant new enterprise within the tech-transfer sector, being the first time that global pharmaceutical companies and world-leading universities have collaborated to create this type of fund.

Each pharma company will contribute £10m over six years to the fund, with £3.3m invested from each technology transfer office (Innovations, UCLB, Cambridge Enterprise). The aim of Apollo is to advance academic pre-clinical research from the three universities to a stage at which it can either be taken forward by one of the pharma companies, following an internal bidding process, or be out-licensed. The pharma partners will also provide R&D expertise/resources to help with commercial evaluation and development of projects.

In summary, Innovations’ participation in the Apollo fund and strengthening relationship with UCL significantly enhance the group’s access to intellectual property and novel technologies from a broader university base and provide greater opportunity to collaborate with major pharma companies like AZ, GSK and J&J.

Focus on accelerated growth

As of 31 December 2015, the investment portfolio comprised 103 companies, of which Innovations classified 44 as ‘accelerated growth’ companies, and this sub-group represented 98.9% of the total net portfolio value (£347.2m vs £327.2m at 31 July 2015). The accelerated growth portfolio typically comprises businesses that Innovations has co-founded, actively invests in, holds a board seat and retains a majority interest in (typically 25-40%). A further 31 companies are deemed ‘lighter touch’, with less direct funding required but strategic advice given, while the remaining 28 companies are in the ‘low involvement’ category, where Innovations typically does not invest further without appropriate further development of the product/technology.

Accelerating the development of the private portfolio

As of 31 December 2015, the unquoted portfolio was valued at £239.6m (vs £220.5m at 31 July 2015), with the quoted portfolio valued at £107.7m (vs £106.8m). While the quoted portfolio is simply marked to market value, a substantial portion (c 95%) of the unquoted portfolio is valued at cost or last funding round, with only a small amount of value (c 3%) attributed to the last funding round and adjusted for milestones and impairments. As of 31 July 2015, the carrying value of the unquoted portfolio was just 1.3x the cumulative cash invested into these companies. Consequently, additional investment and the positive outcome of key catalysts have the potential to unlock hidden value.

The development of public companies will typically offer the prospect of significant near-to-medium-term gains/losses as newsflow will have a more pronounced and immediate impact. One obvious near-term example is the Phase III data due in Q216 from Circassia’s Cat-SPIRE study with its allergy immunotherapy technology. However, the unquoted portfolio offers the prospect of longer-term growth, especially as a number of Innovations’ maturing ‘accelerated growth’ companies approach important catalysts. Achieving technical, clinical and commercial milestones should prompt greater valuation uplifts in the future.

We again highlight the potential valuation discrepancy with the likes of Cell Medica and PsiOxus and publicly traded biotech companies focused on cancer immunotherapy companies that are developing similar technologies. The respective implied valuations of these companies (as of 31 July) of £78m and £81m remain significantly lower than peers such as Juno Therapeutics ($3.9bn), Kite Pharma ($2.3bn) and Bellicum Pharmaceuticals ($250m) even after significant recent falls in share prices across much of the NASDAQ biotech sector.

Going public… or heading for an exit

Other mechanisms for unlocking portfolio value from the unquoted portfolio include IPOs or trade sales. Innovations has had success on both fronts. Its four healthcare holdings (Circassia, Abzena, Oxford Immunotec and Ixico) that listed in 2014 accounted for £106.8m (32.6%) of the portfolio (at 31 July 2015), with all except Ixico ranked within the top 10 portfolio investments. The top 20 portfolio companies (as of 31 July 2015) are presented in Exhibit 4.

Exhibit 4: Innovations’ top 20 portfolio companies (as of 31 July 2015)

Company

Value (£m)

Invested (£m)

% share owned

Sector

Description

Circassia

79.75

25.50

9.3

Therapeutics

Developing therapies for allergy, asthma and COPD. FTSE250 since Sept 2015.

Nexeon

34.09

22.37

39.3

Materials

Battery and licensing silicon anodes for next generation lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries; consumer product/electric vehicle markets.

PsiOxus Therapeutics

22.62

13.68

27.9

Therapeutics

Developing novel therapeutics for serious diseases, with a particular focus on oncolytic virus vaccines for cancer.

Cell Medica

21.04

12.31

27.0

Therapeutics

Cellular immunotherapy company developing therapeutics for oncogenic virus-related cancers oncogenic viruses and infections following bone marrow transplant

Veryan Medical

20.89

13.71

48.2

Medtech

Vascular disease specialist that has developed a 3D helical stent, BioMimics 3D, for peripheral vascular use.

Abzena

17.77

10.48

23.4

Therapeutics

Developing site-specific conjugation technologies (proteins, peptides, antibodies etc), low viscosity polymers and targeted drug delivery to enhance biopharmaceuticals. Immunogenicity screening.

Yoyo Wallet*

9.513

6.97

51.4

ICT

‘App’ that allows mobile payments with integrated loyalty schemes.

Plaxica

9.45

9.00

45.7

Materials

Development of polylactic acid-based biopolymers from renewable resources.

Oxford Immunotec

8.78

7.59

4.6

Medtech

Global, commercial stage diagnostics company developing diagnostic tests in the field of immunological disease. Lead product is T-SPOT TB test for latent TB infection, which is approved for sale in >50 countries.

Autifony Therapeutics

8.56

7.50

26.9

Therapeutics

Development of novel pharmaceuticals to treat hearing disorders and CNS disorders.

Cortexica

7.73

7.85

30.0

ICT

Cloud-based image recognition systems and mobile visual search and categorisation technology.

Abingdon Health

7.72

8.29

33.7

Diagnostics

Specialist medical diagnostics company.

TopiVert

7.54

7.44

30.6

Therapeutics

Developing narrow spectrum kinase inhibitor (NSKI) as a topical therapy for inflammatory diseases of the gut and eye.

Featurespace

6.79

3.89

37.5

ICT

Predictive analytics using a behaviour analytics engine (ARIC).

Crescendo Biologics

6.50

6.50

22.7

Therapeutics

Human antibody fragment therapeutics.

Econic Technologies

6.15

4.40

56.1

Materials

Developing novel catalytic processes for polymer manufacture using waste carbon dioxide as feedstock.

Mission Therapeutics**

6.01

5.83

21.2

Therapeutics

Developing cancer therapeutics targeting deubiquitinating enzymes (DNA damage response).

Kesios Therapeutics**

4.61

2.85

51.4

Therapeutics

Developing therapeutics for multiple myeloma and other haematological cancers based on a novel NFκB signalling pathway drug target.

Pulmocide

3.50

3.50

25.0

Therapeutics

Developing inhaled therapeutics for life threatening respiratory infections.

Impression Technologies

3.26

1.86

59.1

Materials

Aluminium alloy technology formation business for use in the transportation industry.

Other

34.97

29.15

N/A

Net total

327.22

210.67

Source: Imperial Innovations (FY15 results). Note: Net investment carrying value, cash invested and % ownership at 31 July 2015. Carrying values reflect the net fair value of the investment (gross value less attributable revenue-sharing obligation). Shading indicates public companies. *Previously called Just Yoyo. **Value/investment/% stake not reflective of more recent financing rounds.

2016: A year for rebalancing towards technology

Innovations intends to maintain or increase its current rate of portfolio investment while increasing its capacity for identifying and managing investments. Key hires in its ventures team and positioning as the collaborative partner of choice for technology transfer offices/university venture funds should help achieve this. Extensive expertise in healthcare (therapeutics/medtech) has generated a sector that accounted for 73.7% (£233m) of total portfolio value at 31 July 2015. The focus for 2016 will be on replicating this success in other sectors and rebalancing the investment portfolio by building up activities in the non-therapeutic space. Innovations is seeking to increase the relative contributions of other sectors, in particular ICT/digital, which was only 9.9% (£32.3m) of the portfolio, although this partly reflects the low capital intensity of ICT and the successful execution of three trade sales in past two years. Increased investment in Yoyo, Impression Technologies and Featurespace,2 and the recent additions of Garrison Technology, Import.io, Telectica and WaveOptics to the ICT portfolio demonstrate this intent.

  Yoyo and Featurespace are profiled in our report Diving deeper into the portfolio, published 12 March 2015.

Sensitivities

Imperial Innovations’ investment case rests on the success of its investment strategy, in particular its ability to achieve increases in portfolio value (and hence NAV) over and above net new investment. The company is exposed to the business success of its larger portfolio holdings, especially as its investment portfolio includes three publicly listed companies within the top 10 valued assets. As highlighted earlier in the report, the share price performance of the public portfolio companies (particularly Circassia, which accounted for 27.5% of the total portfolio value at 31 July 2015) may affect the total portfolio value either negatively or positively, with the carrying values of these investments marked to market at each financial period end.

With regard to Circassia, we note that the stock is currently trading c 11% lower than the closing price on 31 July 2015, which would similarly reduce Innovations’ carrying value in Circassia by c 11%, or c £8.75m, to c £71m.

Imperial Innovations is also very tightly held, with four shareholders accounting for a total of 90% of the equity, including Invesco (39.75%), Woodford (19.99%), Imperial College (17.4%) and Lansdowne (12.88%). This contributes to limited free float (10%) in the stock, which may increase volatility even on low trading volumes.

Valuation

Imperial Innovations’ shares (at 410p) currently trade at a c 30% premium to our estimated FY16e NAV of 315p/share (at 31 July 2016), after adjusting for the recent capital raise and disclosed portfolio performance. Innovations has historically traded at a premium to its NAV, which can be ascribed to the unrecognised value of its portfolio assets (many of which are valued at cost or the valuation of their last financing) and its technology pipeline agreement with Imperial College and collaborations with other leading UK universities (Oxford, Cambridge, UCL), and other research organisations (eg Babraham Institute). We note that the current premium is substantially lower than the >50% premium typically observed over the last 18-24 months; undoubtedly this has been affected by the wider stock market declines, which have had an impact on healthcare stocks in particular, but it could now provide a more favourable entry point, particularly as Innovations seeks to accelerate investment into a maturing portfolio.

We believe a premium is justified, based on strong historical portfolio performance and the prospect of significant uplift in the next couple of years from the likes of Cell Medica, Veryan and PsiOxus and other maturing private companies (eg Nexeon and Plaxica). Assuming some of these companies are successful in delivering on their near-term strategic objectives (eg positive clinical data, deals, pipeline development, etc) then we would expect portfolio value to significantly outstrip the cash invested. Ultimately this will determine the return on investment for both Innovations in its portfolio and investors in Innovations shares.

Importantly, Innovations has substantial financial resources (c £239m following the recent capital raise) to make the required investment in its maturing portfolio companies that could deliver significant returns in the long run.


Financials

As of 31 December 2015, Innovations’ portfolio consisted of 103 companies, with a net portfolio value of £347.2m (vs £327.2m at 31 July 2015). The £20m portfolio uplift was comprised of investments of £21.2m across 14 companies, less disposals of £0.1m and fair value losses of £1.1m. Since 31 December, and excluding the recently committed investments in Precision Ocular (£6.9m) and Aqdot (£3m), Innovations reports that it invested a further £10.3m into the portfolio. This was offset by £0.9m of impairments in the unquoted portfolio, and a £7.6m reduction in the quoted portfolio (mainly affected by the wider biotech market sell-off), such that the estimated net portfolio value as of 4 February 2016 had increased slightly to £349m.

The recent capital raise, which grossed £100m (£97.5m net estimate) through the placing of 23.5m new shares at 425p, primarily to IVO’s major institutional shareholders (Woodford 56%, Invesco 25%, Lansdowne 7%), significantly increases Innovations’ financial position. When added to the £91.6m held in cash at 29 January 2016 (as reported by IVO) and the £50m EIB loan facility (currently undrawn), we estimate that Innovations has c £239m available for investment.

As such, we now see the investment rate increasing further and estimate £70m in portfolio investments in FY16 (vs £60m previously). We note that £41.4m has been invested, or committed, so far in FY16 (since 1 August 2015), which compares to £60.8m invested during FY15 and £32.8m in FY14. We have now extended our financial forecasts to FY17 (Exhibit 5) and predict a similar portfolio investment rate of £70m in FY17. We currently assume that £30m of the total £50m EIB loan is drawn-down in FY17; this second EIB loan was granted to Innovations in July 2015 and can be drawn in £10m minimum tranches until July 2017. We note that Innovations drew down the full £30m from its first EIB loan (in two £15m tranches in FY14 and FY15).

Our FY16 revenue forecast of £5m (revenues derived from licensing/royalties, services and corporate finance) is maintained in-line with FY15 (£5.1m) at this stage, although we note that Innovations has emphasised the potential for greater revenue growth over the medium to long term. During FY15, 39 new licences were signed and 66 patents filed, demonstrating the ongoing robustness of the Innovations IP portfolio.

With relatively stable operating expenses, Innovations’ profitability is dependent on the level of fair value gains/losses in specific periods taken through the P&L. Gains and losses are inherently difficult to predict. Our change in net fair value estimate for FY16 now reflects an estimated loss of £4m (vs a £10m gain previously), mainly as a result of the reported £9.8m net fair value loss in the quoted portfolio in H116 (1 August 2015 to 29 January 2016). We expect some fair value gains (c £5m) to be recorded in H216 (as portfolio companies progress), but acknowledge that the major swing factor will be the results of Circassia’s Cat-SPIRE Phase III study in Q216, which is likely to have a materially positive or negative impact on Innovations’ fair value for its holding. We estimate a £15m fair value gain in FY17, although this could be conservative in the context of a maturing company portfolio approaching important catalysts.

Exhibit 5: Financial summary

£'000s

2013

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end 31 July

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Revenue

 

 

3,290

3,636

5,099

5,041

5,165

Cost of sales

 

 

(788)

(1,005)

(1,769)

(1,707)

(1,759)

Gross profit

 

 

2,502

2,631

3,330

3,334

3,406

EBITDA

 

 

(6,940)

(8,385)

(8,223)

(8,798)

(9,333)

Operating profit (before GW and except.)

(6,972)

(8,418)

(8,237)

(8,812)

(9,347)

Fair value gains/losses

 

 

10,794

40,549

21,324

(4,000)

15,000

Impairments

 

 

(3,492)

0

0

0

0

Share-based payment

 

 

2,358

(4,821)

1,161

400

(1,500)

Operating profit

 

 

2,688

27,310

14,248

(12,412)

4,153

Net interest

 

 

1,072

106

817

348

(218)

Profit before tax (norm)

 

 

(5,900)

(8,312)

(7,420)

(8,464)

(9,565)

Profit before tax (FRS 3)

 

 

3,760

27,416

15,065

(12,064)

3,935

Tax

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Profit after tax (norm)

 

 

(5,900)

(8,312)

(7,420)

(8,464)

(9,565)

Profit after tax (FRS 3)

 

 

3,760

27,416

15,065

(12,064)

3,935

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average number of shares outstanding (m)

 

81.2

102.4

136.2

148.9

160.7

EPS - normalised (p)

 

 

(7.3)

(8.1)

(5.4)

(5.7)

(6.0)

EPS - FRS 3 (p)

 

 

4.6

26.8

11.1

(8.1)

2.4

Dividend per share (p)

 

 

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BALANCE SHEET

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fixed assets

 

 

188,261

258,327

333,936

400,263

485,275

Tangible assets

 

 

36

26

29

35

46

Intangible assets

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Investment Portfolio

 

 

187,649

257,105

333,268

399,268

484,268

UCSF (University Challenge Seed Fund) investments

517

543

460

460

460

UCSF loans

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Other

 

 

59

653

179

500

501

Financial asset

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Current assets

 

 

67,130

177,800

130,506

146,759

94,850

Cash and cash equivalents

 

 

65,597

176,462

128,097

144,378

92,410

Financial asset

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Accounts receivable, net

 

 

1,533

1,338

2,409

2,382

2,440

Current liabilities

 

 

(3,391)

(4,900)

(5,732)

(5,732)

(5,732)

Trade accounts payable

 

 

(3,391)

(4,900)

(4,232)

(4,232)

(4,232)

Short-term borrowings

 

 

0

0

(1,500)

(1,500)

(1,500)

Long-term liabilities

 

 

(21,542)

(26,445)

(38,639)

(35,245)

(62,123)

Long-term borrowings

 

 

(14,814)

(14,830)

(27,222)

(24,500)

(52,050)

UCSF

 

 

(605)

(640)

(666)

(666)

(666)

Provisions

 

 

(6,123)

(10,975)

(10,751)

(10,079)

(9,407)

Net assets

 

 

230,458

404,782

420,071

506,046

512,270

NAV/share (p)

 

 

231

295

306

315

319

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CASH FLOW

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating cash flow

 

 

(7,465)

(6,523)

(9,331)

(8,825)

(9,274)

Net Interest

 

 

921

44

875

348

(218)

Tax

 

 

0

0

0

0

0

Capex

 

 

(4)

(23)

(17)

(20)

(25)

Purchase of trade investments

 

 

(22,185)

(32,826)

(59,957)

(70,000)

(70,000)

Proceeds from sale of trade investments

 

 

396

3,370

6,190

0

0

Revenue share paid on asset realisations in trade investments

 

 

(172)

0

0

0

0

Equity financing

 

 

36,990

146,823

0

97,500

0

Short term liquidity investments

 

 

(1,581)

0

0

0

0

Net cash flow

 

 

6,900

110,865

(62,240)

19,003

(79,518)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

(43,883)

(50,783)

(161,632)

(99,375)

(118,378)

Other

 

 

0

(16)

(17)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

(50,783)

(161,632)

(99,375)

(118,378)

(38,860)

Source: Imperial Innovations, Edison Investment Research

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Altamir — Update 9 March 2016

Altamir

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