In a flurry of news releases on Feb. 27, Teleflex Inc. reported plans to buy the vascular intervention business of Biotronik SE & Co. for €760 million (US$791 million), said it intended to split into two separate public companies, floated a $300 million accelerated share repurchase program and reported the impending retirement of Chief Financial Officer Thomas Powell. The news sent the company stock down more than 20%.
There is no doubt this year started with a boom for European med-tech companies. Public markets opened in the U.S. and cross-border investors are deploying capital. With many companies looking to conduct clinical trials, raising funds and bringing their devices to the market, 2025 is expected to be prosperous, mitigating the difficulties of the previous two to three years.
Basel Medical Group Ltd. is the first Singapore-based med-tech to price an IPO on the Nasdaq this year, aggregating gross proceeds of $8.82 million on its debut. The funds will be used to power future M&As and business expansion plans in Singapore and Southeast Asia, the company said.
A number of regulatory agencies have signed on to the Medical Device Single Audit Program (MDSAP) for postmarket uses, but the U.S, FDA cannot use these audits for premarket purposes.
Tandem Diabetes Care Inc. reported that its next-generation automated insulin delivery algorithm, Control-IQ+ technology (Control-IQ+), is cleared by the U.S. FDA for use by people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) ages 18 and older.
Med-tech happenings, including deals and partnerships, grants, preclinical data and other news in brief: Boston Scientific, Brainomix, Contura, Cynosure, Dassault Systèmes, Electrocore, Imaginesoftware, Know Labs, Konica Minolta, Life Spine, Lucid, Medtronic, Nanovis, Pavmed, Perimeter Medical Imaging, Spark Biomedical.