After a flood of deals with special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) that took dozens of med-tech and biotech companies public in 2021, deal flow slowed to a trickle in 2022. Market conditions factored into the collapse of interest, but regulatory changes also played a significant role. Still, several notable companies made their market debuts via SPACs in 2022 – and one changed its mind mid-stream.
Carmat SA just completed a flash fundraising of $33 million to increase production of its Aeson total artificial heart and support sales growth in Europe. The operation featured two distinct but concurrent actions: a reserved offer and a public offer. The reserved offer, intended for specialist investors, raised $28.9 million.
Med-tech firms raising money in public or private financings, including: Htg Molecular Diagnostics, Icecure Medical, Perception Vision Medical Technologies.
By several measures, and despite economic hardships leading to layoffs at some companies, the med-tech industry fared well throughout 2022. Financing amounts were greater than nearly every year before the COVID-19 pandemic; deals reached their highest volume to date and mergers and acquisitions did better than most recent years.
Medical technology company Synchron Inc. completed an AU$110 million (US$73.9 million) series C round that will allow the company to conduct a feasibility study and pivotal trial of its implantable brain computer interface that can interpret and stimulate parts of the brain.
The U.K. is taking the next step in applying genomics to health care with the launch of a £105 million (US$130 million) project that will sequence the whole genomes of 100,000 healthy newborn babies to detect rare genetic conditions.
Gaush Meditech Ltd. raised HK$672 million (US$86.4 million) on a Hong Kong Stock Exchange listing. The company plans to use 38.2% of the funds to improve its research and development capability and speed up the commercialization of its patents in two years.