Evaluating development-stage companies with no regard to their technologies and product pipelines has proven to be the primary cause of unfairness to the biotechnology industry as a whole, which led to a general suppression opf excellent firm’s market caps. Technology is what counts in this industry, as it represents the engine that produces novel therapeutic molecules for self and non-self, which will sooner or later translate into revenues.
XOMA
Today, XOMA. (XOMA) announced that it will start cashing on Lucentis™, owned by Genentech. The drug has been recently approved by the FDA for the treatment of neovascular (wet) age-related macular degeneration. Lucentis is the first marketed therapeutic product by a licensee of XOMA’s Bacterial Cell Expression (BCE) technology. The press release stated that XOMA will receive a royalty on worldwide sales of Lucentis. Another drug, Cimzia™ (certolizumab pegol, CDP870), owned by UCB (Euronext-Brussels:UCB), has been submitted to the FDA and European regulators for approval in Crohn’s disease and is currently in Phase 3 clinical trials for rheumatoid arthritis.
XOMA’s BCE licensing program includes production and research licenses, which to date have been signed with more than 45 pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. XOMA has also provided its BCE technology in cross-license arrangements that have allowed XOMA to gain access to seven of the world’s leading phage display libraries and other technologies critical to its antibody discovery and development programs. As a matter of policy, XOMA generally does not disclose royalty percentages, up-front or milestone payments, or other financial terms of specific licenses.
This is one example of “hidden values” of small biotech firms. Many development-stage biotechnology firms have market caps that do not at all reflect the value of their technologies and the promises of their products. Prohost subscribers are aware of these firms.
Is it the best time to invest in this extremely suppressed biotech sector?