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Pulse of the industryUS medical technology report 2008
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Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 3
Medtech industry overview – September 2008
► Medtech M&As are faring much better than overall M&A market► Total dollars: $19.1B for H1 2008 vs. $21.3B for H1 2007 ► Deal volume: 31 deals in H1 2008 vs. 34 deals in H1 2007
► M&A industry participants continue to expand and diversify► More diverse industry participants► More diverse group of buyer/acquirers
► Medtech IPO volume is virtually non-existent in 2008
► Medtech VC financing has remained stable and on a consistent pace with the record 2007 amount
► Several public to private attempts► ArthroCare► AngioTech► Datascope
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 4
Medtech M&A activity begins to slow…
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
$23.6$18.4
$78.7
$48.8
$19.1
$0
$15
$30
$45
$60
$75
$90
2004 2005 2006 2007 H1 2008
US
$b
0
20
40
60
80
100Deal value Number of deals
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 5
…but average deal size increases
$984
$354$256$292
$561$616
$256$292
$561$616
$0
$250
$500
$750
$1,000
2004 2005 2006 2007 H1 2008
US
$m
Total average deal size Total average without mega-deals (>US$10B)
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 6
The top M&A deals of 2007 & H1 2008
Acquiring company Acquired company Value (US$m) Premium
Siemens AG Dade Behring Holdings 7,000 38%
Hologic Cytyc 6,200 36%
Philips NV Respironics 5,100 31%
Warburg Pincus Bausch & Lomb 4,500 6%
Medtronic Kyphon 3,900 32%
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
Acquiring company Acquired company Value (US$m) Premium
Invitrogen Applied Biosystems $6,700 12%
Avista Capital / Nordic Capital ConvaTec (unit of BMS) $4,100 n/a
Roche Ventana Medical Systems $3,400 72%
Kinetic Concepts LifeCell $1,700 19%
GE Healthcare Whatman PLC $726 12%
2007
H1 2008
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 7
Medtech buyers by sector market
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2007 H1 2008
Medtech Conglomerate Private equity Pharma
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 8
Emerging players in the M&A market: deal activity in 2007 & H1 2008
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co. *Cytyc was later acquired by Hologic
Company
Total values (US$m) Product type (disease)
Largest individual acquisition
Hologic 6,880Therapeutic devices
(women’s health) Cytyc
Inverness Medical Innovations 2,365 Non-imaging diagnostics Biosite
Kinetic Concepts 1,700Therapeutic devices
(wound care) LifeCell
Advanced Medical Optics 828Therapeutic devices
(ophthalmic) IntraLase
ev3 793Therapeutic devices
(cardiovascular / vascular) FoxHollow
Greatbatch 281 Other Precimed SA
Regeneration Technologies 263Therapeutic devices
(orthopedic) Tutogen Medical
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 9
Non-imaging diagnostics were a hot commodity in 2007…
Product type# of deals
Total value (US$m)
% of total US$s
Therapeutic devices (all) 53 $23,370 47.8%
cardiovascular / vascular 15 $3,946 8.1%
multiple 9 $2,189 4.5%
orthopedic 8 $5,718 11.7%
ophthalmic 4 $5,372 11.0%
all other 17 $6,145 12.5%
Non-imaging diagnostics 19 $19,662 40.3%
Imaging 5 $3,357 6.9%
Research & other equipment 5 $1,795 3.7%
Other 5 $652 1.3%Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 10
…and continued to be a target in H1 2008
Product type # of deals Total value (US$m) % of total US$s
Therapeutic devices (all) 16 $6,670 34.9%
cardiovascular / vascular 3 $71 0.4%
multiple 2 $4,339 22.7%
wound care 2 $1,773 9.3%
aesthetics 2 $311 1.6%
all other 7 $176 0.9%
Non-imaging diagnostics 7 $4,565 23.9%
Other 4 $423 2.2%
Research & other equipment 2 $7,426 38.9%
Imaging 1 $15 0.1%
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 11
Top non-imaging diagnostic deals
Companies Value (US$m)
Siemens / Dade Behring $7,000
Hologic / Cytyc $6,200
Qiagen / Digene $1,600
Medco / Polymedica $1,500
Inverness Medical / Biosite $1,480
Companies Value (US$m)
Roche / Ventana Medical Systems $3,400
Hologic / Third Wave Technologies $580
Mindray Medical / Datascope (patient monitoring unit) $240
Immucor / BioArray $117
St. Jude Medical / EP MedSystems $92
2007
H1 2008
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 12
Current perspective on private equity healthcare investing► Private equity is targeting the healthcare sector to seek protection from the economic slowdown.¹
► In Europe, total private equity deals in the sector jumped to first place from third place, in part as the result of an aging population in Europe; a growing demand for private healthcare and the prospect of big contracts from the UK government as it outsources more health services to the private sector.¹
► US healthcare private equity deals have also seen an 85% increase from 1H2007 to 1H2008.² ³
► In the mid-market, the healthcare sector is expected to produce the highest returns for its investors among all sectors. A survey by UK mid-market buyout firm August Equity LLP in April 2008 revealed that 17% of respondents think the healthcare sector will perform the best in terms of private equity deals, ahead of energy, mining and utilities.¹
► Private equity firms are also looking beyond traditional healthcare for opportunities. One of the areas is home healthcare. There have been five home healthcare private equity deals so far in 2008, leading by Blackstone’s $1.6 billion acquisition of Apria Healthcare Group.⁴► Other sub-sectors that are of particular interest to PE’s include medical and information technology, healthcare
services and pharmaceuticals.
► Other noteworthy deals in the healthcare space include:► ConvaTec, one of Bristol-Myers Squibb’s three divisions, was sold in May to a PE consorttium led by Avista
Capital Partners ($4.1bn).⁵► Apax’s acquisition of TriZetto Group, a US-based healthcare software company ($1.4bn, April 2008).► In the largest deal in Russia to date, TPG paid $800m for a 50% stake in SIA International, a company that
distributes pharmaceuticals in Russia (April 2008).⁶
Sources: (1)”Health care as a haven - sector finds favor among buyout firms during slowdown,” The Wall Street Journal Europe, May 14, 2008 via Dow Jones Factiva; (2) “Buyout shops get creative in slow deal market, “Buyouts, pg. 40, July 7, 2008; (3) “Risk of Slowdown Rises Toward End of Busy Q2,” Buyouts, pg. 22, July 9, 2007; (4) “Firms look beyond hospitals for healthcare deals” Buyouts, pg. 4, July 7, 2008; (5) The Health Care M&A Monthly, June 2008; (6) the Health Care M&A Monthly, May 2008.
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 13
The emergence of private equity
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
$12.7
$9.6
$4.4
$0
$5
$10
$15
2005 2006 2007 H1 2008
US
$b
No private equity deals
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 14
Top private equity acquirers: 2006-H1 2008
•Completed deal with Goldman Sachs & KKR**Completed deal with Nordic Capital
Acquiring private equity firm Acquired companies
# of deals
Total deal values (US$m)
Blackstone GroupBiomet* (2006), DJ Orthopedics (2007), Encore Medical (2006) 3 13,778
Avista Capital PartnersBMS Imaging (2007), Boston Scientific unit (2007), ConvaTec** (2008) 3 5,000
Warburg PincusBausch & Lomb (2007), Lifecore Biomedical (2008) 2 4,739
Onex Healthcare Holdings Eastman Kodak Health 1 2,550
Texas Pacific Group Tranfusion Therapies (Baxter) (2006) 1 540
TV2 HoldingsSanta Rosa Corporation (Boston Scientific) (2008) 1 65
Source: Ernst & Young, Windhover, Jefferies & Co.
One Equity Partners has proposed to purchase Johnson & Johnson’s Ethicon division’s wound care business; this business unit generated net sales of US$270 million in 2007
Proposed deal in Q3 2008
What will the future bring?
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 16
Outlook for the rest of 2008
► IPO backlog finding extreme difficulty in the public markets► Public investors will continue to be choosy, seeking companies with predictive revenues and profitability► Companies and investors will have to fund and nourish companies for longer periods of time► Market volatility will result in delays – for how long is anyone’s guess► M&A’s will continue to be the exit of choice for most private companies► 3 IPOs ($114.7 million raised) in H1 2008 vs. 7 IPOs ($712 million) in H1 2007
► VCs stay at the table► Look for VCs to increase focus on aesthetics, neuro, surgical tools, ortho (spine) and ophthalmics► Biotech investors will increasingly look to medtech companies to balance their biopharma portfolios► Investors must plan exits more carefully to create maximum valuations…are there enough exits?
► Continuation of strategic consolidations and increased carve-outs► Ample supply of willing buyers…more activity from non-traditional players (mid-tiers, PE)► Large medtech companies have businesses that don’t meet their core goals…profitability or product
► PE will remain an active participant, but large club deals will be limited ► Biomet club deals will be limited - expect to see more single-sponsor acquisitions below $1.5B
► Alternative financing may become more prevalent► Hedge funds, institutional private equity, and insurance companies may be new sources of equity
► Increased regulatory and legal scrutiny ► Product safety, longer approvals, global expansion, reimbursement, sales & marketing practices, etc.
► Next generation of technologies► Large caps will limit R&D programs - more focus on M&As and outsourcing of early-stage R&D to fill pipeline► Neuromodulation, orthopedic repair, remote sensors, minimally invasive surgery, drug-device combinations
Pulse of the industry: US medical technology report 2008 Page 17
Thank you!
► John Babitt► 212.773.0912► [email protected]
► Ernst & Young Global Biotechnology and Medical Technology Center – Boston► +1.617.585.1800► [email protected]► www.ey.com