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January 3, 2003 Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Economic Summit and Outlook 2003.

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Presentation on theme: "January 3, 2003 Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Economic Summit and Outlook 2003."— Presentation transcript:

1 January 3, 2003 Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Kevin Rakin President and Chief Executive Officer Economic Summit and Outlook 2003

2 CT'S Bioscience Cluster Continues to Have Impressive Economic Impact…. Connecticut biotechnology companies raised nearly $557M in private and public capital in 2001 Total 2001 R&D investments of $3.6B including biotechnology R&D of $277M Employment level in 2001 increased to 16,500 jobs with average R&D annual salary at ~ $63,000 Seventh Annual Economic Report of Connecticut United for Research Excellence (CURE), Connecticut's BioScience Cluster

3 Results from the Biotechnology Sector….  > 325M people worldwide have been helped by >130 drugs and vaccines (U.S. FDA approved)  70 % of medicines on the market were approved in the last 6 yrs  > 350 drug products and vaccines currently in clinical trials for > 200 diseases, incl. cancers, Alzheimer's disease, heart disease, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, AIDS and arthritis  Biotechnology is responsible for hundreds of medical diagnostic tests Source:BIO

4  Total 1,457 (342 are publicly held)  Total value $224B as of early May 2002  Have > tripled in size since 1992, with revenues increasing from $8B in 1992 to $27.6B in 2001  Currently employ 179,000 people; that's more than those employed by the toy and sporting goods industries  Spent $15.6B on R&D in 2001 Source:BIO Some Interesting Statistics… US Biotech Companies

5 U.S. Biotech Revenues, 1992-2001

6 *Projections from 2002-07 – avg. of analyst est. Source:Zacks Investment Research; Lehman Bro.; PWC Projected EPS Growth Rates*Productivity Requirements NCEs per year Historical Requirement 2002+ 6-fold increase in NCEs Pharma needs product … Pfizer Pharmacia Schering Aventis J&J BMS Merck Novartis AstraZeneca GSK S&P 500

7 … increasing collaborations with innovative life science companies … Source: Lehman Brothers; Recombinant Capital Number of Pharma Collaborations in 1995 and 2000 1995 2000

8 Source:Signals (Recombinant Capital) … and driving biotech deal revenue Biotech Deal Revenue from Pharma Millions CAGR 1997-01 21%

9 Source: NIH NIH Funding Millions NIH funding provides critical support for research activities NIH funding also critical for funding seed/early- stage companies NIH funding fuels growth of new enterprises …

10 $87.2187Dana-Farber Cancer Institute $108.2299Boston University $162.5414Brigham and Women’s Hospital $180.5483Massachusetts General Hospital $250.4 467Harvard University Total NIH Support (2000, millions) Research Grants (2000) Research Institution … at major research institutions … Source:NIH Yale University $239.8 799

11 *Includes private and public companies Source:Ernst & Young, 2001 … creating a global center of commercial biotech development Number of Companies by Region* 2001 100% = 1,379 Companies

12 U.S. Biotech IPOs

13 Public Offerings (Public Companies) Private Offerings (Public Companies) Venture Investments (Private Companies) 2000 2001 2002 est. Source:Signals (Recombinant Capital) … VC investing has remained consistent … Equity Investments in Life Sciences Billions

14 Recovery of life science sector may occur in 2003 or 2004 … Life science investing has been cyclical with each cycle lasting 3-4 years Biotechnology industry has endured several Wall Street slumps over its 20-year history - the overall trends however, have been positive resulting in a new peak

15 In Summary  The biotech sector is a major U.S. industry  Cluster has critical mass in Connnecticut  Drivers exist for continued growth: –Pharma needs biotech for new products and revenue growth –NIH Funding fuels early stage research –Private Investment in the biotech sector continues  Capital markets should improve 2003/04: –Emerging from bottom of the cycle –Companies are becoming more commercially oriented

16 From Genomics to Drugs Personalized Medicine From Genomics™


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