Markross121_ No Comments

Botox maker Allergan bought by US drug giant for $63bn

Irish firm snapped up by Chicago-based AbbVie in one of biggest ever pharmaceutical deals

The US drug company AbbVie is to buy Allergan, the Irish-based maker of Botox, for $63bn (£49bn), in one of the biggest deals in the global pharmaceutical industry.

Chicago-based AbbVie, which makes the world’s best-selling prescription drug Humira, for rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory diseases, said it would pay $120.30 in cash and a portion of AbbVie stock for each Allergan share. This amounts to $188.24 per share.

The deal will create a company with revenues of $48bn. Dublin-based Allergan specialises in medical aesthetics and eye care, both fast-growing areas, as well as stomach drugs and treatments for the central nervous system. Its treatments include frown-line smoothing, eyelash lengthening and double-chin removal.

AbbVie said the purchase would give it a more diversified product portfolio. Its bestseller Humira will lose patent protection in 2023, which means other drugmakers can make cheaper generic versions.

AbbVie shareholders will own 83% of the enlarged company, while Allergan shareholders will own 17%. It will have its headquarters in Chicago and will be led by the AbbVie boss, Richard Gonzalez, as chairman and chief executive.

Two members of Allergan’s board, including its chief executive, Brent Saunders, will join the board when the deal is completed, expected early next year. Allergan shareholders and regulators have yet to approve the deal.

AbbVie expects to reap at least $2bn in annual cost savings in the third year after the acquisition, but vowed to leave investments in key growth areas untouched. It wants to pay down its debts by $15bn to $18bn by the end of 2021.

 

Read More – www.theguardian.com

Markross121_ No Comments

Blackstone stock continues ascent after firm becomes a corporation

As expected, Blackstone flipped from a publicly traded partnership to a C-Corp on Monday. And the asset manager’s stock jumped nearly 5% to close the day at $46.58 per share, pushing the PE shop’s market cap to more than $55 billion and its stock price beyond its previous all-time high.

Blackstone announced in April it would make the move, joining KKR and Ares Management, which flipped after the 2017 US tax bill dropped the effective corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%. Blackstone hopes to make its stock more accessible to the average retail investor and eliminate the burdensome K-1 tax forms that had to be filled out for publicly traded partnerships. It also aims to make its financial metrics easier to understand.

But perhaps most importantly, flipping to a C-Corp will make the firm’s stock more accessible to index funds and ETFs.

Blackstone’s stock has risen about 55% this year and around 30% since the April announcement. That will no doubt please shareholders as well as co-founder and CEO Stephen Schwarzman, who has long lamented that his firm was significantly undervalued on the public markets. And it’s happening during a year when the firm has already authorized a nearly $1 billion stock buyback program.

KKR hasn’t experienced the same jolt since it flipped to a C-Corp in July 2018. Its shares are trading at roughly the same price a year later, but at $26.88 per share, it’s still up about 30% year-to-date. Meanwhile, Apollo Global Management plans to make the change in 3Q, while The Carlyle Group has resisted the temptation to join its counterparts.

However, analysts have said Blackstone’s performance may cause Carlyle to follow suit, per The Wall Street Journal. Blackstone and KKR have outpaced the S&P 500, which is up about 17% so far this year.

Blackstone will announce its 2Q earnings in an investor call July 18.

In the meantime, the firm’s real estate division is reportedly nearing a deal to sell a portfolio of Spanish mortgages valued at €1.1 billion (about $1.2 billion) to CarVal Investors. Goldman Sachs and Elliott Management also bid for the assets as Spain’s housing market began to recover after that country’s financial crisis.

Read More – www.pitchbooks.com

Markross121_ No Comments

Who are Israel’s most active VCs?

Israel’s startup ecosystem is booming, with a record amount of venture capital funding coming through the country’s gates. Companies hailing from the region have seen a steady increase in capital invested in recent years, culminating in an eye-watering €2.4 billion across 310 deals in 2018, per the PitchBook Platform.

This year got off to a similar start through 1H, as businesses have been making headlines with mammoth rounds. In May, one of Israel’s most valuable startups, Gett, raised a whopping $200 million worth of debt and equity, valuing the provider of a ridehailing app at $1.5 billion. Just a month later, LiDAR developer Innoviz Technologies closed its Series C on a total of $170 million.

The fact that so much capital is going toward Israeli businesses may not surprise. While the country is relatively small in size, it is fast becoming one of the most technologically influential hubs in the world, driven by a young, well-educated workforce and a favorable entrepreneurial environment.

What might raise a few eyebrows is the amount coming from non-Israeli VCs. Some 71% of the country’s rounds include foreign investors, compared with 44% for London-based deals and 24% for those in Silicon Valley, per data from High-Tech Connect Suisse. Israel’s proportion of foreign VC activity is in keeping with a growing global trend of cross-border investment. In fact, around 92% of venture deals last year had participation from foreign investors, according to data from PitchBook, an increase from 89.5% in 2017. The US is responsible for the majority of the deal count, with a total of 1,329 since 2014.

 

Read More – www.pitchbook.com

Markross121_ No Comments

This day in buyout history: Meals, monopolies and a $7.1B club deal

On July 3, 2007, private equity firms KKR and Clayton, Dubilier and Rice finalized a $7.1 billion acquisition of US Foods, a foodservice powerhouse that traces its roots back to well before the Civil War.

It was a mega-deal inked during the final months before the global economy entered a crisis. So as you might expect, it led to a relationship that involved its fair share of drama—including plans for a headline-grabbing exit that were thwarted by regulatory fears. In the end, KKR and CD&R waited nearly a decade to realize their investments, eventually doing so in one of the largest PE-backed IPOs of 2016.

KKR and CD&R first announced their pending acquisition of US Foods (known at the time as US Foodservice) in May 2007, agreeing to hand over $7.1 billion to purchase the company from Dutch retail giant Royal Ahold, almost twice the price Ahold had paid for the business seven years prior. The two firms were equal partners in the deal.

With annual revenue of more than $19 billion at the time , US Foods was one of the most powerful names in foodservice distribution, which involves supplying ingredients and meals to caterers, cafeterias, restaurants and other entities that sell food directly to hungry customers. The company is an amalgamation of several older provisioners, including Reid, Murdoch & Company, which was founded way back in 1853.

It was mostly a quiet rest of the decade for US Foods. In 2011, though, the business embarked on an add-on spree, acquiring fellow food distributors with a more local focus such as Ritter Food Service, Vesuvio Foods and Midway Produce. The changes continued later in 2011, when US Foodservice officially changed its name to US Foods.

With some inorganic growth complete, KKR and CD&R began searching for an exit. They thought they found it two years later. But government watchdogs had different ideas.

The firms agreed to sell US Foods in December 2013 to Sysco in an eyebrow-raising $8.2 billion deal, with the fellow foodservice giant set to pay $3.5 billion for US Foods’ equity and assume a further $4.7 billion of its rival’s debt. The deal called for US Foods’ prior backers to assume a 13% stake in Sysco, with KKR and CD&R both assuming spots on the newly combined company’s board.

It was a move that would have merged the two largest foodservice distributors in the US. Which, as you might imagine, drew the attention of the US Federal Trade Commission. The FTC filed an objection to the merger in February 2015, more than a year after it was first announced, seeking an injunction against the move on the grounds it would reduce competition and drive up food prices for hospitals, schools and other customers across the country. That June, the companies officially abandoned the planned deal.

And so KKR and CD&R were left looking for another exit route. This time, they opted for a move to the public market. US Foods filed for an IPO in February 2016, and it completed the listing that May, pricing an offering of 44.4 million shares at $23 each to raise $1.02 billion, larger than any other traditional PE-backed public offering in the US that year, according to the PitchBook Platform.

In its early days as a public company, US Foods had a market cap of a little over $5 billion—a far cry from the $7.1 billion price KKR and CD&R had paid nearly 10 years before. In the ensuing three years, however, the company’s valuation has ticked steadily up. As of June 28, the final trading day of 1H, stock in US Foods was trading at $35.76, for a market cap of $7.81 billion.

 

Read More – www.pitchbook.com

Markross121_ No Comments

5 women-led firms crushing the gender gap in VC

As we settle into the second half of 2019, the VC industry in the US has already broken a handful of records to push the envelope for female founders and continue striving for gender equality.

For the first time in over a decade, companies founded solely by women have picked up more than 3% of the total capital invested in VC-backed startups in the US.

Capital investment crossed the $1 billion mark for female-founded startups in 1Q 2019—the highest ever for any quarter to date. And out of roughly 300 VC deals for companies led solely by females, four of those businesses have reached unicorn status so far this year. That number includes a high-profile exit from online luxury reseller The RealReal, which debuted on the NASDAQ last month.

While it’s no surprise that the venture industry remains male-dominated, several women are playing an active role on the other side of deal making. We’ve taken a look at five VC firms founded by women and who they’re investing in:

SoGal Ventures

“It took me months to believe in the idea that I, a twenty-four-year-old woman, could start a VC firm,” Pocket Sun wrote in a Medium post. Sun co-founded SoGal Ventures with Elizabeth Galbut in 2016 to invest in early-stage startups across Asia and the US. The firm has made more than 50 investments including EverlyWell, the developer of at-home diagnostic tests and Anomalie, an online wedding dress designer.
Halogen Ventures

Founded by talk show host Jesse Draper in 2016, Halogen Ventures is an early-stage VC fund that focuses on female-founded consumer tech startups. With roughly 50 companies under its belt, the LA-based fund added clothing rental platform Armoire to its portfolio in June. Other significant investments include theSkimm, an online newsletter geared toward female millennials and HopSkipDrive, a California-based provider of a ridehailing app for kids.
Forerunner Ventures

Forerunner Ventures was founded by Kirsten Green in 2010 and has a portfolio of more than 80 startups including mobile banking platform Chime and Modern Fertility, the developer of a personalized fertility test. Glossier, one of the most eminent female-founded unicorns on the block this year, raised $2 million in seed funding from the San Francisco-based firm back in 2013. Forerunner Ventures closed its fourth investment vehicle on a reported $360 million in 2018.
Brilliant Ventures

Santa Monica-based Brilliant Ventures was founded by Kara Weber and Lizzie Francis in 2016 with a focus on women-centric businesses. The firm’s notable investments include Haute Hijab, a direct-to-consumer fashion and lifestyle brand for Muslim women and The Riveter, a Seattle-based workspace community for female-led businesses.
Female Founders Fund

Female Founders Fund was one of the first VC firms that launched with a mission to invest exclusively in companies founded by women. In addition to its thriving portfolio of female-led businesses like Zola, BentoBox, Thrive Global and Rent the Runway, the firm’s ecosystem also provides a peer network for female founders to connect over their experiences and share advice. Founded by Anu Duggal in 2014, the fund has invested in Billie, a female-focused lifestyle brand and Spruce Up, the provider of a home décor platform.

 

Read More – https://pitchbook.com