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Posts Tagged ‘co:Sucampo-Pharmaceuticals’

dollar-shadow.jpgOne deal down – Sucampo Pharmaceuticals, which had filed to raise as much as $69 million in its IPO (we covered them briefly here), priced its IPO well below expectations. Although the company had planned to sell shares for $14 to $16 apiece, it ended up pricing today at $11.50, a 23 percent discount. If the company still manages to over-allotted stock, it will fall just shy of raising $50 million. Sucampo shares, however, were up in early trading to $12.25, according to Nasdaq.

Amedica’s IPO is off… is an acquisition in the wings? – The Salt Lake City spinal-impant maker announced this morning that it is withdrawing its IPO bid due to “market conditions.” Oddly, though, the company hasn’t yet filed a withdrawal statement with the SEC (check it out yourself here). Perhaps the market for device makers is cooling the same way it has for biotechs, or maybe Amedica has just gotten a better offer. The company certainly isn’t hurting for cash — it raised $13.2 million just days before filing its IPO papers, and CEO Ashok Khandkar said in the company’s statement that Amedica has “sufficient funding” to finish its manufacturing facilities and launch its spinal implants in 2008.

Our previous coverage of Amedica is here, here and here.

dollar-shadow1.jpg(UPDATED: See below.)

It’s been a long, barren summer for biotech IPOs, but ImaRx, the blood-clot company we featured here, finally managed to bull its way into the public markets. The company, which withdrew an earlier $75 million IPO and lowered its offering price on the current one, finally finally priced its IPO at its most recent target of $5 a share, selling three million shares for an anemic take of $15 million, excepting fees and possible overallotment sales.

That makes ImaRx the first biotech to make it to the public markets via an IPO in almost two months. The slowdown hasn’t stopped companies from filing — yesterday Archemix joined the list, and the day before brought us Cumberland Pharmaceuticals setting its offering price. Still, the backlog is building: Over at Signals Magazine, Jennifer van Brunt counts 12 outstanding IPO filings (13, actually, but only because she still lists NovaCardia, which which Merck bought out yesterday), the oldest of which — Light Sciences Oncology — has been at the starting line for over a year.

Much of the holdup reflects the fact that most of the biotechs that have gone public this year haven’t done well at all in the market. Response Genetics, for instance, went public on June 4, and has since fallen 13 percent. Jazz Pharmaceuticals, which we hazed here, here and here, lowered its offering price several times and is still down 20 percent. Amicus Therapeutics, which actually has an interesting technology, is down 23 percent. (Stock data courtesy of Renaissance Capital’s IPOHome.)

And so it goes, right down the line. Of the 17 biotech IPOs this year, only six — Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, Biodel, Pharmasset, Orexigen Therapeutics, Tongjitang Chinese Medicines, Optimer Pharmaceuticals — are trading above their offering price. Biotech investors are used to long odds, but at the moment, it’s hard to blame them for being a bit standoffish where new offerings are concerned. They’ll soon get a chance to test their mettle again, as the next few weeks are expected to bring Sucampo Pharmaceuticals and Cumberland Pharmaceuticals to the gate.

UPDATE: This item, which began life as a brief notice of the ImaRx IPO pricing, has morphed into a fuller take on the miserable state of the biotech IPO market.

UPDATE REDUX: So far, the odds of ImaRx breaking the IPO slump are looking pretty long. At about 10:45 a.m. Pacific time, the stock is trading down at $4.75, down five percent.

FINAL UPDATE: ImaRx closed its first day at $4.79, down 4.2 percent.

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