Neostem A Chinese Takeover Candidate? May 28, 2012about:
NBS, includes: BAX, JNJ In my article NeoStem's Comeback In The Making, I was
focused on the completion of the sale of the China generic pharmaceutical
business and the fact that it would bolster NeoStem's balance sheet. This would
ultimately lead to more focus and resources spent on the development of the
company's stem cell applications for heart diseases, as well as other biotech
products. Digging deeper in the stem cell research field, I came to another
theoretic possibility: NeoStem (NBS) is a perfect M&A candidate for a
Chinese company with international ambitions.
Chinese Stem Cell Research China 's output in
fundamental stem cell research has increased markedly in recent years. Vigorous
public investment and infrastructure development have enabled major
productivity gains, but challenges in regulation, governance, and the
management of clinical expectations must be addressed to ensure scientific
quality and sustainable growth. Although China 's regulatory environment had
previously been more accepting of cellular-based therapies, in December 2011,
the Chinese Ministry of Health announced that companies using stem cells must
register their clinical activities and asked local health authorities to halt
unapproved use of stem cells in their regions. They also asked for a moratorium
on new clinical trials and that patients in existing clinical trials should not
be charged. As a result of this and other factors, NeoStem has determined to
take steps to restrict (and expects to ultimately eliminate) its regenerative
medicine business in China .
Regulation China will halt new
applications for clinical trials of stem cell products until July 1st as part
of a year-long campaign to regulate the development of the industry, according
to a Ministry of Health spokesman's statement in December 2011. Previously, China had one of the most unrestrictive
embryonic stem cell research policies in the world. In May of 2009, the Ministry
of Health in China
announced new regulations for the clinical application of stem cell therapies.
These rules will require stem cell centers to provide evidence of the safety
and efficacy of the therapies they offer, but these treatments are still
available, as the government is working through the details of these
regulations. Afterwards, the Ministry of Health will need to evaluate each
available therapy according to the Ministry's new criteria, so it will be some
time before we know what impact these new regulations have on the stem cell
landscape in China .
Whether China
succeeds in overcoming the controversy around its stem cell clinics will
largely depend on its ability to regulate them. The government's development of
new clinical regulations show its commitment to changing the status quo of how
these therapies are offered, but strict implementation of the new regulations
will be required to quell international criticisms.
Potential The Chinese government has
rapidly built up its scientific capacity in regenerative medicine, including
stem cells, tissue engineering, and gene therapy. China 's
success in this field is increasingly hard to deny: China is now the 5th largest
publisher of peer-reviewed papers on stem cell research in the international
scientific literature, shooting from 37 publications in 2000 up to 1,116 in 2008. Although still short of the United States ' 6,008 stem cell publications in
2008, China 's publication
levels nearly match those of the United Kingdom ,
Japan , and Germany . China has adopted a four way
approach to build its stem cell industry since 2007, including permissive
policies on stem cells, recruiting back Chinese expatriates into local
research, and providing annual funding of about $320 million. A more stringent
regulatory system will allow Chinese institutions to sell products overseas. How
has China
built its regenerative medicine field so quickly? The Chinese government has
employed a highly successful four-pronged approach to building up regenerative
medicine, combining a powerful recruitment strategy for researchers, ample
funding, permissive regulations, and a focus on rapidly deriving applications. Regenerative
medicine therapies are an attractive solution to an increasing burden of
chronic disease faced by China 's
large and aging population. Research in the field aspires to produce solutions
to a number of chronic conditions, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes,
and degenerative conditions associated with age. As a result, the Chinese
government has identified it as a health research priority.China has also strongly focused its
research objectives towards generating therapeutic applications. Moreover,
universities and hospitals have the tight relationships needed to understand
patient needs and translate research from lab to clinic, making China
a front-runner in the race to develop therapies.
Investment Case It is time to start taking
China
seriously. China 's
progress in regenerative medicine has gone largely unnoticed because of the
Western media's focus on stem cell tourism and other controversial facts around
its stem cell clinics.China has had setbacks, but if it keeps building on its
strengths and overcoming its regulatory challenges, the country may stand at
the forefront of the race to develop internationally recognized regenerative
medicine treatments and therapies that patients desperately need everywhere
around the globe. This year will be important in how China 's regulations affect the stem
cell industry. In my opinion, the outcome will be positive and will lead the
way for renewed focus and investments in the stem cell industry. Big
pharmaceuticals are urgently looking to buy up smaller firms to fill in their
revenue gaps. In fact, for the past two years, M&A activity in the biotech,
pharma, and generics industries have hit record numbers. This has pushed
premiums way up for smaller drug and biotech companies. Let's hope NeoStem can
also profit from this trend.In the quarterly report of Cowen and Company Asia,
you see the deal flow in China
regarding Healthcare. Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) made a big move in China
earlier this month with the purchase of its first medical device company in
that country. The company picked up Guangzhou Bioseal Biotech, which develops a
porcine plasma-derived biologic product for controlling bleeding during
surgery, for an undisclosed sum. J&J has a growing portfolio of hemostasis
products in China .
The company could use NeoStem's distribution network in China . Furthermore, the close
relationship between NeoStem and Baxter (BAX) looks like a catalyst that could
bring M&A activity in the future. NeoStem's existing shareholders, such as
RimAsia Capital Partners and Enhance Biomedical Holding Corp., could take the
company private or cooperate with a Chinese merger opportunity.The depressed
stock price has potential to fly, so let China , and the Chinese, decide. Disclosure:
I am long NBS.
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