16.02.2018 19:20:00
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Great Point Partners, LLC Opposes The BioCryst Pharmaceutical Proposed Merger With Idera Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
GREENWICH, Conn., Feb. 16, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Great Point Partners, LLC ("GPP") today submitted a letter to the Board of Directors of BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ("BCRX") expressing its opposition to BCRX's proposed merger with Idera Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The full text of the letter can be found below and is attached as an exhibit to GPP's Schedule 13D, which was filed today and discloses GPP's acquisition of additional BCRX securities.
To the Board of Directors (the "Board") of BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ("BCRX")
We are Great Point Partners, LLC ("GPP"), an investment manager beneficially owning 7,478,275 shares of common stock of BCRX. We write to advise you that we are strongly opposed to the proposed merger of BCRX with Idera Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ("IDRA") and intend to vote our shares against any proposal to authorize or consummate such merger.
Based on our experience investing in pharmaceutical and biotechnology research and development ("R&D") companies, we believe BCRX shares are undervalued and represent a low-risk and high reward investment in the spectrum of such companies. It is our view that the merger is significantly unbalanced and represents a substantial transfer of highly valuable BCRX assets to the shareholders of IDRA in exchange for more speculative IDRA assets of far more uncertain value. Since IDRA's principal shareholder is also a significant shareholder of BCRX, but has invested substantially more in IDRA than in BCRX, it is our view that the merger enables such shareholder to substantially increase its interest in BCRX's assets at a substantial discount from their true value, and to the ultimate detriment of the other BCRX shareholders.
Since the Board has apparently determined to discontinue BCRX as a standalone business, we believe it is incumbent upon the Board to explore alternative strategies to maximize the value of BCRX's assets for the benefit of all shareholders. As explained in detail below, it is our view that the market price of BCRX's securities has not heretofore reflected the full value that would be recognized had alternative strategies been explored. Based on our experience, we would expect several large biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies to be interested in paying a significantly greater amount than IDRA is paying through contribution of its stock to NewCo in order to control the BCRX assets.
Among other points, we note the following:
In contrast, while we acknowledge there may be potential significant upside in IDRA shares if its lead asset, IMO-2125, proves enormously successful in the immuno-oncology field, and while we leave it to IDRA shareholders to assign a proper valuation to IDRA shares, we believe IMO-2125 has a completely different, and higher, risk profile than BCX-7353, and therefore significantly increases risk for BCRX shareholders exchanging their shares for those of the proposed NewCo. IMO-2125 has only been given to a small number of patients to date, the clinical experience thus far has not included a control arm of any kind, and the studies have been done in a combination setting with another active agent, making it difficult to judge the activity of just IMO-2125. Consequently, we believe it cannot be determined with any certainty if and to what extent IMO-2125 itself is effective. Furthermore, the regulatory path is entirely unclear, since the immuno-oncology field is among the most competitive in all of biotechnology research and development, making it extremely difficult to know what it takes to be the winner, even if a new drug proves to be an active agent.
As we evaluate this merger, we have consulted the latest Institutional Shareholder Services ("ISS") Proxy Voting Guidelines, published January 4, 20187. ISS cites 6 key factors to be considered in a review of Mergers and Acquisitions (page 34 of its report) and we have listed each below in tandem with our view:
• ISS #1: Valuation - Is the value to be received by the target shareholders (or paid by the acquirer) reasonable? While the fairness opinion may provide an initial starting point for assessing valuation reasonableness, emphasis is placed on the offer premium, market reaction, and strategic rationale.
GPP View: First, we must assess, who is the target and who is the acquirer? The companies state that this is a merger of equals. We disagree. As noted, the largest shareholder in IDRA is also the largest shareholder in BCRX. However, including its warrants, this shareholder has an investment in IDRA with a market value that is approximately twice the size of the market value of its BCRX investment ($155 million vs. $78 million as of the merger announcement date, corresponding to a beneficial ownership interest of at least approximately 25.6% of the shares of IDRA, but approximately 14.2% of the shares of BCRX).8 Furthermore, this investor controls two seats on IDRA's board of directors. Assuming this largest shareholder will act rationally and in its own best interests, as the chart below indicates, such shareholder would logically view this transaction as an increase in ownership (to almost 20% from 14%) of BCRX's more advanced drug assets in exchange for its voting interests in IDRA's more speculative assets, to the detriment of the remaining BCRX shareholders who will be diluted. At current merger share exchange rates, independent BCRX shareholders will only own 44.3% of the combined company, whose drug pipeline will be proportionately diminished in future value by absorption of IDRA's assets.
Pre-Deal Ownership | Post-Deal | |||||||
Largest Shareholder | Press Release | Largest | ||||||
Shares | $ (M) | % | % | |||||
IDRA | 25.6% | $156 | 48.4% | 12.4% | ||||
BCRX | 14.2% | $78 | 51.6% | 7.3% | ||||
NewCo | 19.7% | |||||||
All other | All other | |||||||
Shares | $ (M) | |||||||
IDRA | 74.4% | $451 | 48.4% | 36.0% | ||||
BCRX | 85.8% | $472 | 51.6% | 44.3% | ||||
NewCo | 80.3% |
- Other than the largest shareholder, all BCRX shareholders are reducing their indirect interest in the BCRX assets and are not being paid appropriate value for those assets.
- All BCRX shareholders are being diluted by ~48.4% in their ownership of BCRX assets in exchange for IDRA assets, which, as discussed above, have vastly less certain value.
- All BCRX shareholders are exchanging shares with a readily liquid trading marketplace (BCRX shares have traded an average of 1.56 million shares per day over the past year) for shares in NewCo which have a completely uncertain liquidity profile – in our experience, shares in newly listed entities often take significant time in order to develop a strong liquidity profile.
• ISS #2: Market reaction - How has the market responded to the proposed deal? A negative market reaction should cause closer scrutiny of a deal.
GPP View: BCRX's stock price changes since the merger announcement date is further confirmation that market participants agree that this merger destroys value. In the first ten trading days following the merger announcement, the BCRX stock price declined by 22.2% while the Russell 2000 Biotechnology Index, a broad measure of small capitalization life sciences stocks, was up 2.8%, a relative underperformance of ~25% As of the date of this filing, even with additional share purchases by GPP (over the past 8 trading days GPP has purchased over 20% of the volume per Bloomberg), the relative underperformance since the announcement is still more than 16%. Our conviction that this merger is ill-advised, and that BCRX would be more valuable either continuing to operate independently or being acquired by a third party, has driven our desire to increase our holdings in an effort to defeat the merger proposal. Indeed, if we believed that this merger was inevitable, we would not have purchased additional shares.
• ISS #3: Strategic rationale - Does the deal make sense strategically? From where is the value derived? Cost and revenue synergies should not be overly aggressive or optimistic, but reasonably achievable. Management should also have a favorable track record of successful integration of historical acquisitions.
GPP View: Both IDRA and BCRX are currently R&D companies with no material commercial operations. The vast majority of their expenses, and indeed their respective valuations, are being driven by their clinical R&D operations. Therefore, any merger should make strategic sense from this point of view. Yet, on the investor call hosted by both companies on the day the transaction was announced, per the transcript9, the first question posed by an analyst was:
"….I'm kind of wondering really if you could provide a little bit more color on the clinical synergies that you see with this merger",
To which Mr. Vincent Milano, the CEO of IDRA (and the proposed CEO of NewCo), responded as follows (GPP emphasis added with underline):
"…So on the clinical synergy, I think the way we view this, Charles, is that we're going to put the two companies together and all the programs that we currently have are going to continue to operate as is. With regards to the operations team, the work in front of us as we get prepared for the closing, we'll take a look at the processes, if you will, of both companies from a clinical operations standpoint, take the best of both and combine them. But this merger wasn't contemplated under creating clinical operation synergies, if you will. It's really about the point you raised, not only diversifying the risk, but creating greater opportunities for greater returns by putting the two companies with the two respective talent bases and experiences together, and also the two discovery engines where we think we can enhance the number of rare disease targets that our technologies together could be applied to…"
Later in the call, when an analyst asked for examples of how these two very different platforms will work together, the answer from the Mr. Milano was:
"that's a terrific question and I'll apologize in advance that I can't give you all the answers yet…. the team is working on together comparing the two lists, if you will"
It appears to us that the merger has not been exhaustively evaluated and we agree with management's assessment above that there is no obvious synergy between the clinical operations of the companies which currently operate in completely different therapeutic modalities. For unprofitable companies in the R&D business, cash is a precious asset, yet management was not able to cite any significant cost synergies.
- Prior to the announcement of the merger, BCRX stated on its most recent earnings call that it had cash sufficient to "to complete the BCX-7353 HAE regulatory requirements, to allow us to file an NDA and an MAA, as well as to prepare and fully resource our commercial infrastructure to successfully launch 7353." Since that time, BCRX disclosed the potential for a greater than $20 million procurement contract on Peramavir, and as such we now model that BCRX would have sufficient cash to sustain BCRX's operations well into 2020.
- Meanwhile, IDRA had stated in its January 5, 2018 press release, that it had only enough cash on hand to sustain operations through the second quarter of 2019.
Neither management team has provided guidance for cash synergies or an extended cash runway due to this merger, so given that IDRA had a shorter runway than BCRX, we believe that NewCo would have a shorter cash runway than BCRX has as a stand-alone company. This shorter cash runway may cause additional needs for financing at uncertain prices and additional dilution to all shareholders.
A strategic rationale offered by management on the investor call seems to be an increase in near-term catalysts.
On the investor call, the CEO of BCRX, Mr. Jon Stonehouse, said:
"we get questions from investors in the past that said, oh, you don't have anything until first half of 2019 with the read-out of APeX-2. The combined company gives you read-outs on IMO-2125, a read-out on IMO-8400, a read-out on ZENITH. I mean, it completely changes what's coming between now and the end of this year."
If BCRX shareholders care for access to those IDRA events, without synergies in the combined entity, then there is no difference for those shareholders owning shares in NewCo, versus just buying shares of IDRA for themselves. It seems this transaction may have been done to gain access to highly risky, short-term value creation opportunities, at the cost of maintaining full control and rights to significantly larger longer-term, higher certainty, value creation in the key BCRX assets. If shareholders of either company wanted to diversify risk by owning shares of the other company, they can purchase shares on their own.
The only other area which has been identified as a potential synergy in this merger is the addition of IDRA management as a steward for BCRX's lead asset in HAE, a disease in which Mr. Milano and other proposed management of NewCo have significant experience and success from their prior company. We agree with this assessment, but in our view, this single point is not sufficient to justify 48.4% dilution for BCRX shareholders.
• ISS #4: Negotiations and process - Were the terms of the transaction negotiated at arm's-length? Was the process fair and equitable? A fair process helps to ensure the best price for shareholders. Significant negotiation "wins" can also signify the deal makers' competency. The comprehensiveness of the sales process (e.g., full auction, partial auction, no auction) can also affect shareholder value.
GPP View: While we do not have access to information at the level of the Board, all the information that we do have appear to indicate that this transaction was hastily conceived and fashioned and that the BCRX Board did not engage in a process to evaluate fully all of the strategic alternatives that might be available. We note that BCRX completed an underwritten equity financing through JP Morgan just four months ago on September 18, 2017, at which time BCRX made no mention of exploring a potential IDRA merger, other strategic alternatives, or needing to augment or change the management team to fully capitalize on the value of BCRX's assets.
In fact, on the investor call to discuss the merger proposal, an analyst asked, "Just wondering, did Idera approach BioCryst for this merger or the other way around", and Mr. Milano responded as follows:
"This is Vin. Thank you for your question. So, as we stated in our prepared remarks, Jon and I have known each other for many years. And as you can imagine, friends and CEOs share stories about the challenges that we face. And I would say that we collectively, one night over drinks, decided wouldn't it be interesting to see if we could combine forces to improve the probability of success, enhance the value proposition both for patients and shareholders. And so it started over a drink, if I could say that."
This sounds very far from describing a comprehensive exploration of how a company can maximize the value of its assets; or even the exploration of any sale process at all. The ownership ratios contemplated in the merger appear to simply be approximations of the ratio of the then-current market capitalizations of each company, despite the significant disparity in cash runways, or product potentials including the timing and likelihood of reaching that potential. There is no indication that BCRX considered any other valuation measure at all. Until a full auction process is run, given the differences between the two constituents of the proposed merger, there is zero justification for BCRX shareholders to give up a significant interest in the BCRX assets.
• ISS #5: Conflicts of interest - Are insiders benefiting from the transaction disproportionately and inappropriately as compared to non-insider shareholders? As the result of potential conflicts, the directors and officers of the company may be more likely to vote to approve a merger than if they did not hold these interests. Consider whether these interests may have influenced these directors and officers to support or recommend the merger. The CIC figure presented in the "ISS Transaction Summary" section of this report is an aggregate figure that can in certain cases be a misleading indicator of the true value transfer from shareholders to insiders. Where such figure appears to be excessive, analyze the underlying assumptions to determine whether a potential conflict exists.
GPP View: We cannot say if there are any significant conflicts of interest at the board level of BCRX. We note only the inherent benefit to BCRX's largest shareholder at the expense of everyone else as described above.
In addition, in an objective analysis, BCRX management appear to benefit financially immediately from this transaction. As described in the merger agreement10, all then-outstanding BCRX stock options accelerate and vest in full in the proposed transaction. Given our experience as an investor, we believe it is also safe to assume that NewCo will be adopting a new incentive plan and will issue additional options to some of the very people whose options had just vested. Consequently, management is benefitting disproportionately to get the deal done, with existing shareholders being further diluted and disadvantaged.
• ISS #6: Governance - Will the combined company have a better or worse governance profile than the current governance profiles of the respective parties to the transaction? If the governance profile is to change for the worse, the burden is on the company to prove that other issues (such as valuation) outweigh any deterioration in governance.
GPP View: The companies have provided only limited information on governance for NewCo. The merger agreement states that NewCo's board of directors would consist of four directors from BCRX, four from IDRA and one additional director subject to mutual agreement; the identities of six out of nine are currently unknown to us. Based on our analysis of the disparate value of the two entities, this evenly allocated board disadvantages the existing BCRX shareholders.
Currently, no single BCRX shareholder owns more than 15% of BCRX's outstanding shares, whereas in the proposed NewCo, the existing largest shareholder's ownership will increase to approximately 20% of the NewCo shares as a result of its greater proportionate ownership of IDRA. With all other BCRX shareholders being diluted, a holding of that size may result in effective voting control.
In summary, we believe that the proposed merger is not in the best interest of BCRX shareholders and we intend to vote against it. We encourage the Board to reconsider the propriety of the current proposed transaction.
Very truly yours,
Name: DAVID KROIN
Title: MANAGING DIRECTOR
1 BioCryst earnings call, November 7, 2017.
2https://www.fda.gov/forindustry/userfees/prescriptiondruguserfee/ucm566079.htm
3https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/936402/000110465915074944/a15-22162_1ex99d1.htm
4http://investors.shire.com/news-and-events/news-releases/yr-2013/11-11-2013a.aspx
5https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/936402/000095010308001827/dp10565_ex9901.htm
6https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/946840/000119312508150887/dex991.htm
7https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/americas/US-Voting-Guidelines.pdf
8 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/861838/000163859918000057/xslF345X03/doc4_5183.xml, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/861838/000114420417054858/tv478052_sc13da1.htm, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1263508/000114420417058963/0001144204-17-058963-index.htm
9 Bloomberg Transcript service
10https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/882796/000110465918003194/a18-3548_1ex2d1.htm
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SOURCE Great Point Partners, LLC
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