Send Me an Angel: More VC Alternatives on the Rise

November 28, 2011 – 10:30 am | By Trista Morrison | 3 comments

It seems to me that an increasing number of start-ups have been boot-strapping their way through preclinical without venture capital lately.

I have no quantitative data to back this up. But it’s a feeling I had earlier this year, too, as we reported on some big non-VC start-up rounds, like Ascletis Inc.’s $100 million raised largely from high net worth investors in China, and Acetylon Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s $27 million Series B round raised in $1 million chunks from private individuals. We even made this subject the topic of BioWorld’s BIO 2011 panel.

The trend appears to be continuing. Avaxia Biologics Inc. just raised $2.2 million in Series A financing from angels. Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc. closed a $10 million Series A2 round led by Chione Ltd., a Greek investment vehicle for a high net worth individual. Quanticel Pharmaceuticals Inc. raised $45 million through a unique deal with Celgene Corp. and Versant Ventures. And last month, Russia’s state-owned investment firm Rusnano made some big bets on Selecta Biosciences Inc. and Bind Biosciences Inc.

Non-VC deals are still the minority, but they seem to be ever so slightly more common than in the past. I’m guessing this is a trend born of necessity – with so many VCs pulling back (Prospect Ventures, Scale Venture Partners, etc.), start-ups might be forced to seek alternatives more often than in the past.

But even so, the fact that alternatives exist is encouraging. I’m a self-professed optimist on biotech, but I’m even further encouraged by the bills moving through Congress that could boost small company fundraising options. For start-ups in particular, H.R. 2930 could be good news, as it would let private companies raise up to $2 million through crowd funding, essentially opening the private markets to non-accredited investors. For all the details, don’t miss this week’s BioWorld Insight.

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3 Comments

  1. fundageek
    Posted November 29, 2011 at 10:28 pm | Permalink

    I’d like to introduce FundaGeek.com, the next generation crowdfunding platform expressly for tech start-ups and basic research. We’re seeking commercial projects based on some form of technology, including inventions. We’re also seeking scientific research project in need of funding from the physical and life sciences, engineering and math/science education. Happy funding!

    Cheers,

    Daniel – http://www.fundageek.com

  2. Trista Morrison
    Posted November 30, 2011 at 12:48 pm | Permalink

    Nice to hear from you, FundaGeek. I spoke with RocketHub for my crowd-funding article – they were also very optimistic about the potential for crowd-funding to support science.

  3. Posted November 30, 2011 at 1:08 pm | Permalink

    Yes, crowdfunding of scientific research is a big reason we created FundaGeek. We believe basic research needs an alternate funding paradigm in light of the current state of the grant process. The difference between FundaGeek and other crowdfunding site like Rockethub is that FundaGeek is exclusively devoted to funding science and technology, and NOT creative projects. We won’t even accept a film project. Plus, our company is not run by musicians and artists; we’re run by technologists and scientists.

    Cheers,

    Daniel

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