The lagging economy is hurting Massachusetts' vaunted life-sciences industry, and
might especially hinder the development of new drugs, according to a report
released today by MIT researchers.
While the federal stimulus bill gave a temporary boost to academic scientists in
2009, the recession is taking a major toll on investors in science - including the
venture capitalists whose dollars help move promising ideas from universities into
the commercial sector. That means start-up biotech firms are now struggling to find
funding.
"The generation of ideas still seems to be strong, but the mingling of ideas and
people and money just isn't happening at the same rate," says Fiona Murray, a
professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, who helped direct the research
report, "Analyzing Innovation and Venture Formation in the Massachusetts Life
Sciences Cluster.” Seeing research innovations languish unfunded, Murray thinks,
is a real and "alarming" prospect.
The part of Massachusetts' life-science sector hit hardest by the downturn is the
state’s prominent biotech-based drug discovery sector, whose firms pour
hundreds of millions of dollars over many years to create new drugs. "It's a very
costly, high-risk business to bring a new molecule all the way from conception into
the clinic," notes Murray, "and investors are looking for less expensive ideas where
they can imagine getting a product into the market more quickly." That means much
of the remaining funding is going to firms producing medical devices or research
tools: Surgical tools, pacemakers, cardiac stents, and more.
The status of Massachusetts' life-sciences industry is of national significance,
since around 20 percent of all U.S. biotechnology venture capital is invested in the
region. The regional trends also mirror the national picture. The average venture-
capital investment in a life-science start-up, nationally, has dropped from about $12
million in 2007 to $9 million in 2009, and in Massachusetts from around $12 million
to $10 million over the same time.
Losing diversity in the research system
In researching the report, Murray and Edward Roberts, another MIT professor,
directed a team of 30 MIT Sloan students who conducted extensive interviews with
dozens of executives and investors in the Boston area throughout 2009, inquiring
about their financial and strategic concerns; the researchers then systematically
analyzed to identify significant themes and trends. Additionally, they worked with
the consulting and accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers, which examined
financial data on the life sciences. Jonathan Fleming, a managing partner at the
local venture capital firm Oxford Bioscience Partners, also helped produce the
report together with MLSC staff.
The report was prepared for the Massachusetts Life Sciences Collaborative
(MLSC), an organization composed of area universities (including MIT), technology
firms, hospitals, and trade groups. Murray is presenting the report today to the
MLSC’s Leadership Council, which includes MIT President Susan Hockfield.
In broad outline, publicly-owned biosciences companies have not fared worse than
those in other economic sectors. But the money directed at life-sciences start-up
companies has diminished, from almost 20 percent of all venture capital in 2007, to
under 10 percent in 2009.
And while venture capitalists invest money in early-stage firms in hopes of getting a
big payoff, often through an Initial Public Offering (IPO), that route to profit has
been closing lately. In 2008, 21 life-sciences firms nationally postponed or
withdrew IPO offerings, and only one biotech start up, Bioheart, Inc., which focuses
on cardiac therapies, enjoyed a public offering; there were no such IPOs in 2009.
The MIT interviews with leaders in the regional biotech ecosystem also indicate
that investors now expect small companies to focus on a single core project.
Murray regards that as a disconcerting development, since it can be very hard to
tell which early-stage research projects will pay off - which molecule being
created in a lab, for instance, will become a viable drug. Thus cultivating a variety of
research projects makes success more likely, both for companies and the industry
as a whole.
"The economic crisis is forcing diversity out of the research system, both at the
level of companies, and of investors' portfolios," says Murray. "And that is
potentially alarming over the long term." In Massachusetts, the number of venture-
capital deals in the area of drug discovery dropped from about 70 and 80 in 2007
and 2008, respectively, to under 60 in 2009. "If the whole drug-discovery engine
were to dry up, that would be very problematic in the long run," adds Murray.
"The investment level we saw before the recession might never come back," says
Glen Comiso, director of life sciences and health at the Massachusetts Technology
Collaborative, a public agency that supports innovation in the state (and helped
found the MLSC). "Others might say investment is cyclical in nature. But this report
is important because it examines the question of how we should manage this type
of innovation in this economic climate."
Incubating new ideas
The report suggests multiple remedies to spur innovation, like a state-wide
clearinghouse to better connect investors with scientists looking to found start-up
firms. Such a clearinghouse might allow non-profit foundations that target certain
diseases to locate and fund promising research that applies to their causes, too.
"We need to channel the non-VC funding in a better way," says Murray. "The
venture capitalists are well-connected to the ideas and the people. Other people
are less efficiently connected." It is precisely in economically difficult times,
Comiso adds, when overall investment levels drop, that states should look to
"improve efficiencies of funding systems, and ask how to pull together non-
traditional sources of funding, from [private] angel investors to the disease
foundations."
Murray suggests that university-based programs, including MIT's Deshpande
Center for Technological Innovation, which funds research and connects scientists
to investors, can also help allocate money to promising projects. In this economic
climate, she adds, universities might consider grants to extend the time graduate
students have in the lab before they take research ideas into the commercial world.
Such funding, she says, would let scientists aiming to start companies "nurture
ideas a little longer before they go out into this pretty harsh environment."
Contact: Peter Dizikes
gillooly@mit.eduMIT News Office
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