Strong progress across PureTech’s portfolio,
with significant near-term catalysts
Robust shareholder returns enabled by Founded
Entity1 monetization; $100 million Tender Offer and $50 million
buyback completed
Strong balance sheet with expected operational
runway for at least three years
Company to host a webcast and conference call
today at 9:00am EDT / 2:00pm BST
PureTech Health plc (Nasdaq: PRTC, LSE: PRTC) ("PureTech" or the
"Company"), a clinical-stage biotherapeutics company dedicated to
changing the lives of patients with devastating diseases, today
announces its half-yearly results for the six months ended June 30,
2024. The following information will be filed on Form 6-K with the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") and is
also available at
https://investors.puretechhealth.com/financials-filings/reports.
Commenting on PureTech's half-yearly results, Bharatt Chowrira,
PhD, JD, Chief Executive Officer of PureTech, said:
“I am proud of the talented team at PureTech that has continued
to deliver results with a sense of diligence and passion. PureTech
made significant progress in the first half of 2024, advancing our
mission to develop innovative therapies for the patients most in
need. We have also implemented strategies to drive efficient
operations and capital allocation. This has resulted in a decrease
in both our R&D and G&A expenses at the PureTech level.
“Looking ahead, we are focused on several key catalysts. The
highly anticipated FDA decision around the approval of KarXT, which
is expected by Bristol Myers Squibb (“BMS”) in September, would
unlock the first in a series of milestone payments to PureTech in
the coming years as well as future royalties. We are also very
excited about the readout of our Phase 2b trial from our Internal
Program, LYT-100 (deupirfenidone), which is expected by the end of
2024. We believe LYT-100 has blockbuster potential to transform the
treatment landscape for patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
(“IPF”) as the preferred standard of care, driving significant
value for PureTech. Additionally, we expect clinical readouts from
both the Vor and LYT-200 programs as well as further clinical
progress at Seaport and Vedanta.
“With our robust hub-and-spoke drug discovery and development
model and strong financial foundation, we believe PureTech is
well-positioned to rapidly advance innovative therapeutic
candidates to patients, and we remain committed to unlocking and
realizing value for our shareholders.”
Webcast and conference call details
Members of the PureTech management team will host a conference
call at 9:00am EDT / 2:00pm BST today, August 28, 2024, to discuss
these results. A live webcast and presentation slides will be
available on the investors section of PureTech's website under the
Events and Presentations tab. To join by phone, please dial:
United Kingdom (Local): +44 20 3936 2999
United Kingdom (Toll-Free): +44 800 358 1035
United States (Local): +1 646 664 1960
United States (Toll Free): +1 855 9796 654
Access Code: 808029
For those unable to listen to the call live, a replay will be
available on the PureTech website.
Key Internal Programs2 & Founded Entities
Internal Programs
Ownership
Indication
LYT-100
(deupirfenidone)
100%
Being advanced for idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis and potentially other conditions involving pulmonary
fibrosis
Founded Entities
Ownership3
Overview
Seaport Therapeutics
57.7% Equity
Advancing a clinical-stage pipeline of
neuropsychiatric medicines
Karuna Therapeutics
(wholly owned subsidiary of Bristol
Myers Squibb as of March 18, 2024)
Regulatory and commercial milestone
payments from Royalty Pharma (up to $400M) and BMS, and 2%
royalties on annual net sales >$2B from BMS
Advancing transformative medicines for
people living with psychiatric and neurological conditions
Gallop Oncology
100% Equity
Pioneering novel therapies for the
treatment of hematological malignancies, alongside treatments for
locally advanced/metastatic solid tumors such as head and neck
cancers
Vedanta Biosciences
35.9% Equity
Pioneering a new category of oral
therapies based on defined bacterial consortia
Vor Bio
3.9% Equity
Engineering hematopoietic stem cells to
enable targeted therapies for patients with blood cancers
Sonde Health
34.9% Equity
Developing a voice-based artificial
intelligence platform to detect changes in health
Entrega
73.8% Equity
Engineering hydrogels to enable the oral
administration of peptide therapeutics (e.g., GLP-1 agonists)
Highlights
PureTech
- Completed enrollment of the Phase 2b ELEVATE IPF trial of
LYT-100 (deupirfenidone) in IPF, with topline results expected by
the end of 2024.
- Executed $100 million tender offer, which – together with the
Company’s $50 million share buyback program that completed on
February 7, 2024 – constituted $150 million of capital returned to
shareholders since May 2022.
- Appointed key executives, including Bharatt Chowrira, PhD, JD,
as Chief Executive Officer (formerly President and Chief Business,
Finance and Operating Officer), Eric Elenko, PhD, as President
(formerly Chief Innovation Officer), Charles Sherwood III, JD, as
General Counsel, and Raju Kucherlapati, PhD as Chair of the Board
of Directors on a permanent basis.
- Welcomed two entrepreneurs-in-residence: Sven Dethlefs, PhD,
formerly Executive Vice President and CEO of Teva North America,
and Luba Greenwood, JD, Managing Partner of the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute Venture Fund, Binney Street Capital, and former Chief
Executive Officer and Board Chair of Kojin Therapeutics.
- Announced in the August 2024 post-period that Michele Holcomb,
PhD, will join PureTech’s Board of Directors as an independent
non-executive director on September 23, 2024.
Founded Entities
- Karuna Therapeutics (“Karuna”) was acquired by
BMS in March 2024 for a total equity value of $14 billion. PureTech
received approximately $293 million gross proceeds from its equity
position in Karuna and is eligible to receive up to $400 million in
future milestone payments as well as royalty payments based on
KarXT regulatory and commercial successes.
- PureTech launched Seaport Therapeutics (“Seaport”) with
a $100 million oversubscribed Series A financing to progress the
development of novel neuropsychiatric therapeutic candidates
enabled by Glyph™, its novel platform that allows drugs to be
absorbed like dietary lipids so they can enter the lymphatic system
directly and avoid first pass metabolism. Seaport is led by
PureTech Founder and Former CEO and Seaport Founder and CEO Daphne
Zohar, with Steven M. Paul, M.D., former CEO and Chair of Karuna,
as Founder and Chair of the Seaport Board of Directors.
- PureTech announced that it will advance LYT-200
(anti-galectin-9 mAb) via Gallop Oncology (“Gallop”) for the
treatment of hematological malignancies, such as acute myeloid
leukemia (“AML”) and high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (“MDS”),
and metastatic/locally advanced solid tumors, including head and
neck cancers. LYT-200 received two designations from the US Food
and Drug Administration (“FDA”): Orphan Drug designation for the
treatment of AML and Fast Track designation for the treatment of
head and neck cancers.
- Vedanta Biosciences (“Vedanta”) enrolled the first
patient in its pivotal Phase 3 RESTORATiVE303 trial of VE303 for
the prevention of recurrent C. difficile infection (“rCDI”).
Vedanta was also awarded $3.9 million from CARB-X to ready VE707
for a first-in-human study for the prevention of
multidrug-resistant infections.
- Vor Biopharma (Nasdaq: VOR) (“Vor”) dosed the first AML
patient in VBP301, a Phase 1/2 multicenter, open-label,
first-in-human study of VCAR33ALLO and announced that it expects to
provide a clinical trial update in the second half of 2024.
- Sonde Health (“Sonde”) launched Sonde Cognitive Fitness
in the July post-period, which analyzes eight vocal characteristics
from 30-second voice interactions to provide insight into one’s
cognitive state, helping people manage their mental well-being and
productivity effectively.
- Entrega continues to advance its platform for the oral
administration of biologics, vaccines and other drugs that are
otherwise not efficiently absorbed when taken orally. To validate
its technology, Entrega generated preclinical proof-of-concept data
demonstrating administration of therapeutic peptides into the
bloodstream of large animals.
Financial:
- Consolidated Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments
as of June 30, 2024, were $500.4 million4 (December 31, 2023:
Consolidated Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments of
$327.1 million) and PureTech Level Cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments as of June 30, 2024, were $400.6 million5
(December 31, 2023: PureTech Level Cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments of $326.0 million)
- Operating expenses for the six months ended June 30, 2024, were
$66.7 million (June 30, 2023: $79.3 million).
- PureTech expects to have PureTech Level Cash, cash equivalents
and short-term investments of approximately $330 million6 at
December 31, 2024, which is inclusive of expected payments of
approximately $40 million to address the Company’s tax obligations.
As of June 30, 2024, the Company maintains an expected operational
runway of at least three years.
Key Upcoming Milestones
- PureTech expects topline results from the Phase 2b ELEVATE IPF
dose-ranging trial of LYT-100 in patients with IPF by the end of
2024. The trial is designed to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability,
safety and dosing regimen of LYT-100 in patients with IPF compared
to placebo and will also assess the relative efficacy of two doses
of LYT-100. The primary endpoint is the rate of decline in Forced
Vital Capacity (“FVC”) for the combined LYT-100 arms versus placebo
over the 26-week treatment period using a prespecified Bayesian
approach. Both doses of LYT-100 will be compared to pirfenidone,
though the trial is not powered to show a statistical difference in
efficacy between LYT-100 and pirfenidone. We believe LYT-100 has
the potential to have a profound impact on the way IPF is managed
by allowing patients to start, continue and fully benefit from
treatment, both as monotherapy and in combination settings with
other antifibrotic therapies.
- KarXT (formerly Karuna; now wholly owned by BMS) has a
Prescription Drug User Fee Act (“PDUFA”) date of September 26,
2024, for the treatment of schizophrenia in adults, which means the
FDA is expected to make a decision regarding the approval of KarXT
by this date. If the drug is approved, this would unlock the first
in a series of potential milestone payments to PureTech in the
coming years as well as future royalties. Pending approval, BMS
also announced that KarXT is expected to launch in late 2024.
- LYT-200 (which will be advanced via Gallop) is being evaluated
in two ongoing Phase 1b clinical trials for the treatment of
relapsed/refractory AML and MDS as well as in combination with
tislelizumab in head and neck cancers. Additional data from the
open label trials are expected in the fourth quarter of 2024 and
will help to inform future development work.
- Vor expects to provide clinical trial updates for trem-cel and
VCAR33ALLO in the second half of 2024. Trem-cel is a shielded
transplant in development for patients with AML and MDS in which
healthy transplant donor cells are genetically engineered removing
CD33, with the potential to shield healthy cells and enable
targeted therapies post-transplant such as Mylotarg and CAR-T
therapy. VCAR33ALLO is a transplant donor-derived anti-CD33 CAR-T
cell therapy for patients with AML who have relapsed following a
standard-of-care or trem-cel transplant.
- Vedanta expects topline data from its Phase 3 RESTORATiVE303
trial of VE303 for the prevention of rCDI in 2026. This trial is
evaluating the efficacy and safety of VE303 in patients with rCDI
and is intended to form the basis for a Biologics License
Application (“BLA”) to be filed with the FDA. It also expects
topline data from its Phase 2 COLLECTiVE202 clinical trial of VE202
for the treatment of ulcerative colitis (“UC”)in 2025. Vedanta also
expects to initiate a Phase 1 trial of VE707 for the prevention of
multidrug-resistant infections in 2025.
About PureTech Health
PureTech is a clinical-stage biotherapeutics company dedicated
to giving life to new classes of medicine to change the lives of
patients with devastating diseases. The Company has created a broad
and deep pipeline through its experienced research and development
team and its extensive network of scientists, clinicians and
industry leaders that is being advanced both internally and through
its Founded Entities. PureTech's R&D engine has resulted in the
development of 29 therapeutics and therapeutic candidates,
including two that have received both U.S. FDA clearance and
European marketing authorization and a third (KarXT) that has been
filed for FDA approval. A number of these programs are being
advanced by PureTech or its Founded Entities in various indications
and stages of clinical development, including registration enabling
studies. All of the underlying programs and platforms that resulted
in this pipeline of therapeutic candidates were initially
identified or discovered and then advanced by the PureTech team
through key validation points.
For more information, visit www.puretechhealth.com or connect
with us on X (formerly Twitter) @puretechh.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within
the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995. We intend such forward-looking statements to be covered by
the safe harbor provisions for forward looking statements contained
in Section 27A of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended and
Section 21E of the Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements
contained in this press release that do not relate to matters of
historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements,
including without limitation, statements that relate to our
expectations around our and our Founded Entities’ therapeutic
candidates and approach towards addressing major diseases,
operational plans, future prospects, objectives, developments,
strategies and expectations, the progress and timing of clinical
trials and data readouts, the timing of regulatory approvals or
clearances from the FDA, our future results of operations and
financial outlook, including our anticipated cash runway and our
forecasted cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, and
our ability to realize value for our shareholders.
The forward-looking statements are based on current expectations
and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other
important factors that could cause actual results, performance and
achievements to differ materially from current expectations,
including, but not limited to, the following: our history of
incurring significant operating losses since our inception; our
ability to realize value from our Founded Entities; our need for
additional funding to achieve our business goals, which may not be
available and which may force us to delay, limit or terminate
certain of our therapeutic development efforts; our limited
information about and limited control or influence over our
Non-Controlled Founded Entities; the lengthy and expensive process
of preclinical and clinical drug development, which has an
uncertain outcome and potential for substantial delays; potential
difficulties with enrolling patients in clinical trials, which
could delay our clinical development activities; side effects,
adverse events or other safety risks which could be associated with
our therapeutic candidates and delay or halt their clinical
development; our ability to obtain regulatory approval for and
commercialize our therapeutic candidates; our ability to compete
with companies currently marketing or engaged in the development of
treatments for indications within our programs are designed to
target; our ability to realize the benefits of our collaborations,
licenses and other arrangements; the impact of government laws and
regulations; our ability to maintain and protect our intellectual
property rights; our reliance on third parties, including clinical
research organizations, clinical investigators and manufacturers;
our vulnerability to natural disasters, global economic factors,
geo-political actions and unexpected events; and the risks,
uncertainties and other important factors described under the
caption "Risk Factors" in our Annual Report on Form 20-F for the
year ended December 31, 2023 filed with the SEC and in our other
regulatory filings. These forward-looking statements are based on
assumptions regarding the present and future business strategies of
the Company and the environment in which it will operate in the
future. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as at the date
of this press release. Except as required by law and regulatory
requirements, we disclaim any obligation to update or revise these
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise.
- As of the date of this release, Founded
Entities represent companies founded by PureTech in which PureTech
maintains ownership of an equity interest and, in certain cases, is
eligible to receive sublicense income and royalties on product
sales. References to Founded Entities include PureTech’s Seaport
Therapeutics, Inc., Gallop Oncology, Inc., Entrega, Inc., Vor
Biopharma, Inc., Sonde Health, Inc., Vedanta Biosciences, Inc., for
all dates prior to March 18, 2024, Karuna Therapeutics, Inc., for
all dates prior to July 2, 2024, Akili Interactive Labs, Inc., for
all dates prior to October 30, 2023, Gelesis, Inc., for all dates
prior to December 21, 2023, Follica, Incorporated, and for all
dates prior to December 18, 2019, resTORbio, Inc. For references
and definitions related to PureTech’s Viability Statement,
Financial Review, and Financial Statements and related footnotes,
please see Footnote 4 to the Consolidated Financial
Statements.
- Internal Programs represent the Company’s
current and future therapeutic candidates and technologies that are
wholly owned and have not been announced as a Founded Entity.
- Founded Entities represent companies founded
by PureTech in which PureTech maintains ownership of an equity
interest and, in certain cases, is eligible to receive sublicense
income and royalties on product sales. Relevant ownership interests
were calculated on a partially diluted basis (as opposed to a
voting basis) as of June 30, 2024, including outstanding shares,
options and warrants, but excluding unallocated shares authorized
to be issued pursuant to equity incentive plans. PureTech controls
Seaport Therapeutics, Inc. and Gallop Oncology, Inc. Vor Biopharma
ownership was calculated on a beneficial ownership basis in
accordance with SEC rules as of August 2, 2024.
- Cash, cash equivalents and short-term
investments as of June 30, 2024, and as of December 31, 2023 held
at PureTech Health plc and consolidated subsidiaries. For more
information, please see below under the heading "Non-IFRS Financial
Information.”
- This represents a non-IFRS number and is
comprised of Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments held
at PureTech Health plc and our following wholly-owned subsidiaries:
PureTech LYT, Inc., PureTech LYT 100, Inc., Alivio Therapeutics,
Inc., PureTech Management, Inc., PureTech Health LLC, PureTech
Securities Corp., PureTech Securities II Corp. For a reconciliation
of this number to the IFRS equivalent number, please refer to the
"Non-IFRS Financial Information” section of this report.
- This represents a non-IFRS number and is
comprised of Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments held
at PureTech Health plc and our following wholly-owned owned
subsidiaries: PureTech LYT, Inc., PureTech LYT 100, Inc., Alivio
Therapeutics, Inc., PureTech Management, Inc., PureTech Health LLC,
PureTech Securities Corp, PureTech Securities II. We are not able
to provide a reconciliation of this forecasted number to the IFRS
equivalent number because PureTech Level Cash, cash equivalents and
Short-term investments as of December 31, 2024, is contingent on
upon a number of factors, certain of which cannot be predicted on a
forward-looking basis without unreasonable efforts or are not
within our control. Actual PureTech Level Cash, Cash Equivalents
and Short-term investments as of December 31, 2024, may differ
significantly from this projection. This projection does not
include any potential cash inflows that may be received by the
Company prior to December 31, 2024, and may be impacted by factors
beyond our control, including unanticipated cash expenditures and
changes in the value of short-term investments.
Non-IFRS Financial Information
Cash flow and liquidity
PureTech Level cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
Measure type: Core performance
Definition: Cash and cash
equivalents and short-term investments held at PureTech Health plc
and our wholly-owned subsidiaries.
Why we use it: PureTech Level cash,
cash equivalents and short-term investments is a measure that
provides valuable additional information with respect to cash, cash
equivalents and short-term investments available to fund the
Wholly-Owned Programs and make certain investments in Founded
Entities.
Non-IFRS Measures Reconciliation
The following is the reconciliation of the amounts appearing in
our Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position to the
alternative performance measure described above:
(in thousands)
June 30,
2024
December 31,
2023
Cash and cash equivalents
308,478
191,081
Short-term investments
191,938
136,062
Consolidated cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
500,416
327,143
Less: cash and cash equivalents held at
non-wholly owned subsidiaries
(99,778)
(1,097)
PureTech Level cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
$400,638
$326,046
Interim Management Report and Financial Review
Interim Management Report
Introduction
PureTech’s core mission is to give life to new classes of
medicine to change the lives of patients with devastating diseases.
With this mission in mind, we pioneered the hub-and-spoke business
model. Our R&D engine has proven successful in this endeavor,
having identified, developed and progressed 29 highly
differentiated therapeutic approaches, including KarXT, LYT-100
(deupirfenidone) and the portfolio of Seaport Therapeutics, among
others. We maintain one of the most impressive track records in the
biopharma industry, with more than 80% of our clinical trials
having demonstrated success since 2009.
Unique drug discovery approach
We believe that our high level of productivity and clinical
success is a result of our distinctive approach to drug
development. We first identify an area with significant patient
need. We then explore therapeutic approaches that often have
validated human efficacy but have not yet reached their full
potential due to key limitations, such as the route of
administration or side effects. Next, we work to unlock a potential
new medicine’s full benefit while executing efficient de-risking
experiments. We adhere to disciplined R&D strategies, and we
only allocate resources to programs that reach our pre-specified
thresholds for advancement. This allows us to pivot resources
towards the programs with the greatest likelihood of advancement
and has resulted in our success rate. Once a program has achieved a
key value-generating inflection point, we determine whether the
best path forward to maximize patient benefit and shareholder value
is through continued internal development or via a Founded Entity,
an asset sale, and/or partnering and royalty transactions.
We intend to utilize the same proven strategy to determine the
ideal path for the advancement of our Internal Program, LYT-100,
following the results of the Phase 2b trial by the end of this
year. We will be guided by the data, and we will pursue the optimal
route to deliver this potentially transformational medicine to
patients and generate value for our shareholders.
Efficient funding model
Our Founded Entities serve as specialized platforms to pursue
development with external partners, supporting timely progress of
novel medicines to patients while also mitigating binary risk
through a diverse portfolio. KarXT demonstrates how our Founded
Entities are able to generate value for our shareholders, while
also demonstrating our capital efficient approach. We allocated
$18.5 million to the program, and – in addition to transforming the
treatment landscape for patients with schizophrenia –Karuna's
success has allowed us to generate approximately $1.1 billion in
cash to date to fund our operations, fuel our next wave of
innovation and return capital to shareholders. This has been
realized through the monetization of a portion of our holdings in
Karuna, gross proceeds from the BMS acquisition, and a strategic
royalty agreement for KarXT with Royalty Pharma that provided us
with capital in the short-term and which we believe has great
potential for long-term earnings based on KarXT's future regulatory
and commercial milestones, as well as product sales.
Our distinct business model and successes like Karuna have
enabled us to be a well-capitalized organization: For more than six
years we have been able to fund new and maturing programs to key
inflection points without external funding at the PureTech Level,
we have returned $150 million to shareholders via our share buyback
program and Tender Offer, and – going forward – we aim to maintain
at least three years of cash runway.
Commitment to shareholder value
Maximizing long-term shareholder value remains the Company’s top
priority, and the Board and Management Team conduct a continual
review of various strategies in order to unlock and crystallize
value for shareholders. In doing so, the board aims to balance (1)
opportunities for further capital returns, (2) sourcing and
development efforts to grow our portfolio of potential new
medicines and (3) support for our current programs and Founded
Entities, all while serving patients in need.
PureTech’s expertise builds on a rich legacy of innovation. It
spans the lifecycle of drug development, is infused with scientific
entrepreneurship and maintains a capital efficient ethos. As we
look towards the development of our next wave of innovation, we are
focused on advancing candidates with validated efficacy within the
rare and specialty disease spaces, and we look forward to providing
updates in due course.
Notable Developments
Internal Programs
Our Internal Programs are guided by a strategy of leveraging
validated efficacy to rapidly advance therapeutics with proven
profiles. A deeper level of risk management at every stage of
development is core to PureTech’s development philosophy.
Importantly, our approach prioritizes maintaining the validated
pharmacology of efficacious drugs while applying an innovative step
to maximize their unrealized potential for patient needs.
Our lead Internal Program, LYT-100 (deupirfenidone), is
currently in clinical development for IPF, which is a rare,
progressive and fatal lung disease with a median survival of 2-5
years.1 Pirfenidone (Esbriet®) is approved for the treatment of IPF
in the US and other countries, having been shown to slow the
decline of lung function and extend life by an average of 2.5
years.1 It is one of two standard-of-care treatments for IPF, with
nintedanib (Ofev®) being the other. Despite the proven efficacy of
both treatments, only about 25 percent of patients with this rare,
progressive and fatal disease are currently being treated with
either standard-of-care drug,2 largely due to tolerability issues.
Furthermore, combined sales of Esbriet and Ofev in 2022 were more
than $4 billion, representing a significant market opportunity in
IPF and other fibrotic lung diseases.3
LYT-100 maintains the pharmacology of pirfenidone but has a
highly differentiated pharmacokinetic profile that has translated
into favorable tolerability, as demonstrated by data from multiple
human clinical studies. Our goal with the ongoing Phase 2b ELEVATE
IPF trial is to validate the ability of LYT-100 to demonstrate a
favorable tolerability profile and efficacy that’s comparable to
pirfenidone, while also exploring the potential for enhanced
efficacy at a higher dose. Based on clinical data generated to
date, we believe that LYT-100 has the potential to disrupt the
treatment paradigm for IPF and become the backbone antifibrotic for
a range of combination therapies as well as the preferred
monotherapy for IPF patients, including the 75% who are not
currently on standard-of-care treatment. The trial is fully
enrolled, and we look forward to sharing topline results by the end
of 2024.
This program is emblematic of PureTech’s strategy. We identified
a clear patient need with a large market opportunity and are
efficiently advancing a drug candidate with a clear development
path and existing clinical validation.
Founded Entities
Our Founded Entities have achieved significant milestones in the
first half of 2024.
In March 2024, Karuna was acquired by BMS for
approximately $14 billion, marking a significant advancement in our
Founded Entity’s mission to deliver transformative medicines for
people living with psychiatric and neurological conditions. Karuna
is now a wholly owned subsidiary of BMS, and Karuna’s lead
candidate, KarXT, has been granted a PDUFA date of September 26,
2024, for the treatment of schizophrenia in adults. If the drug is
approved, this would unlock the first in a series of potential
milestone payments to PureTech in the coming years as well as
future royalties. Pending approval, BMS also announced that KarXT
is expected to launch in late 2024.
In April 2024, PureTech launched Seaport with a $100
million oversubscribed Series A financing. The funding included
participation from top tier biotech investors ARCH Venture
Partners, Sofinnova Investments and Third Rock Ventures to progress
the development of neuropsychiatric therapeutic candidates
initially developed internally at PureTech. Seaport is advancing
first and best-in-class medicines for the treatment of
neuropsychiatric disorders using the Glyph platform. The Glyph
platform is uniquely designed to allow drugs to be taken orally by
targeting them directly into the lymphatic system (similar to the
way a dietary lipid is absorbed) rather than the liver, which helps
to reduce liver toxicities and enables more active drug to reach
the desired target in the body. Seaport’s pipeline includes,
SPT-300 (formerly LYT-300), an oral prodrug of allopregnanolone,
which is being advanced for the treatment of major depressive
disorder; SPT-320 (formerly LYT-320), a novel prodrug of
agomelatine, which is being advanced for the treatment of
generalized anxiety disorder; and SPT-348, a prodrug of a
non-hallucinogenic neuroplastogen, which is in development for the
treatment of mood and other neuropsychiatric disorders.
We also announced that we would be advancing LYT-200
(anti-galectin-9 mAb) through another Founded Entity,
Gallop, for the treatment of hematological malignancies,
such as AML and high-risk MDS, as well as metastatic/locally
advanced solid tumors, including head and neck cancers. LYT-200 has
displayed a favorable safety and tolerability profile in two
ongoing Phase 1b clinical trials – one in AML and another in
combination with BeiGene's tislelizumab in head and neck cancers.
The Phase 1b clinical trial evaluating LYT-200 in
relapsed/refractory AML and MDS patients is ongoing, and we expect
additional data from the trial will be presented in a scientific
forum in the fourth quarter of 2024. Also, the Phase 1b trial of
LYT-200 in combination with tislelizumab in head and neck cancers
is ongoing, with additional data expected in the fourth quarter of
2024. In 2024, the FDA granted LYT-200 Orphan Drug designation for
the treatment of AML as well as Fast Track designation for the
treatment of head and neck cancers.
Vedanta further advanced the development of a potential
new category of oral therapies utilizing defined consortia of
bacteria isolated from the human microbiome and grown from pure
clonal cell banks. In May 2024, Vedanta announced that the first
patient was dosed in the global Phase 3 RESTORATiVE303 clinical
study of VE303, which is an orally administered defined bacterial
consortium candidate that is being developed for the prevention of
rCDI. The RESTORATiVE303 trial is evaluating the efficacy and
safety of VE303 in patients with rCDI and is intended to form the
basis for a BLA to be filed with the FDA. Vedanta announced that
topline data are expected in 2026. In April 2024, Vedanta was
awarded $3.9 million from CARB-X to advance Vedanta’s VE707
preclinical development program for reducing colonization and
preventing subsequent infections caused by multidrug-resistant
organisms. Vedanta expects the initiation of a Phase 1 trial in
2025. Vedanta also progressed its Phase 2 COLLECTiVE202 clinical
trial of VE202 for the treatment of UC, for Vedanta anticipates
topline data in 2025.
Vor has continued to develop its platform for crafting
Hematopoietic Stem Cell to enable targeted therapies
post-transplant. In January 2024, Vor announced it had dosed the
first patient in VBP301, its Phase 1/2, multicenter, open-label,
first-in-human study of VCAR33ALLO in patients with relapsed or
refractory AML after standard-of-care transplant or a trem-cel
transplant. Vor announced that it expects to release a VCAR33ALLO
clinical trial data update in the second half of 2024. In March
2024, Vor announced that the FDA had granted Fast Track designation
and Orphan Drug designation to VCAR33ALLO. In May 2024, Vor
announced that the trem-cel clinical trial had been expanded to
include patients diagnosed with MDS. Approximately 1,250 stem cell
transplants occur annually in the US for patients with MDS and
Vor’s approach represents an important advancement in potentially
transforming treatment of these blood cancers. Vor’s trem-cel has
the potential to enable the use of anti-CD33 therapies in those
settings, and the company is exploring the potential use of
trem-cel in combination with targeted therapies in these
indications. Vor announced that it expects to provide a trem-cel
clinical trial data update in the second half of 2024.
Sonde has continued to progress a voice-based artificial
intelligence platform that detects changes in the sound of voice
that are linked to health conditions – such as depression, anxiety
and respiratory disease – to provide health tracking and
monitoring. In March 2024, Sonde announced the publication of a new
study that has validated the ability of the company’s mental
fitness vocal biomarker platform to reliably distinguish
individuals with elevated mental health symptoms. The four-week
cohort study revealed a statistically significant correlation
between voice-based identification of increased or decreased mental
health risk with the results of the M3 Checklist, a clinically
validated mental health assessment. In the July post-period, Sonde
launched Sonde Cognitive Fitness, which analyzes eight vocal
characteristics from 30-second voice interactions to provide
insight into one’s cognitive state, helping people manage their
mental well-being and productivity effectively.
Entrega has continued to progress its technology platform
to enable the oral administration of biologics, vaccines and other
drugs that are otherwise not efficiently absorbed when taken
orally. Entrega’s innovative approach uses a proprietary,
customizable hydrogel dosage form to control local fluid
microenvironments in the gastrointestinal tract in an effort to
both enhance absorption and reduce the variability of drug
exposure. Entrega has generated preclinical proof-of-concept data
demonstrating administration of therapeutic peptides into the
bloodstream of large animals.
In May 2024, Akili and Virtual Therapeutics, a company
focused on improving mental health at scale using engaging,
immersive games, announced the signing of a definitive merger
agreement to form a diversified, leading digital health company.
The merger closed in the July 2024 post-period, and Akili is now a
wholly owned subsidiary of Virtual Therapeutics.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
This Interim Management Report contains forward-looking
statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. We intend such forward-looking statements to be
covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward looking
statements contained in Section 27A of the U.S. Securities Act of
1933, as amended and Section 21E of the Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended. All statements contained in this Interim Management Report
that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be
considered forward-looking statements, including without
limitation, statements that relate to our and our Founded Entities’
therapeutic candidates, operational plans, future prospects,
objectives, developments and, strategies and expectations, the
progress and timing of clinical trials and data readouts, our
intentions for the advancement of LYT-100 and its potential to
treat IPF, our expectations as to potential earnings based on
KarXT's future regulatory and commercial milestones, our
expectations as to the achievement of clinical milestones across
our Founded Entity program, the maintenance of our cash runway, and
our commitment to realizing long-term value for our shareholders.
These forward-looking statements are based on the Company’s current
expectations and are subject to known and unknown risks,
uncertainties and other important factors that could cause actual
results, performance and achievements to differ materially from
current expectations, including, but not limited to, the following:
our history of incurring significant operating losses since our
inception; our ability to realize value from our Founded Entities;
our need for additional funding to achieve our business goals,
which may not be available and which may force us to delay, limit
or terminate certain of our therapeutic development efforts; our
limited information about and limited control or influence over our
Non-Controlled Founded Entities; the lengthy and expensive process
of preclinical and clinical drug development, which has an
uncertain outcome and potential for substantial delays; potential
difficulties with enrolling patients in clinical trials, which
could delay our clinical development activities; side effects,
adverse events or other safety risks which could be associated with
our therapeutic candidates and delay or halt their clinical
development; our ability to obtain regulatory approval for and
commercialize our therapeutic candidates; our ability to compete
with companies currently marketing or engaged in the development of
treatments for indications within our programs are designed to
target; our ability to realize the benefits of our collaborations,
licenses and other arrangements; the impact of government laws and
regulations; our ability to maintain and protect our intellectual
property rights; our reliance on third parties, including clinical
research organizations, clinical investigators and manufacturers;
our vulnerability to natural disasters, global economic factors,
geo-political actions and unexpected events; and the risks,
uncertainties and other important factors described under the
caption "Risk Factors" in our Annual Report on Form 20-F for the
year ended December 31, 2023 filed with the SEC and in our other
regulatory filings. These forward-looking statements are based on
assumptions regarding the present and future business strategies of
the Company and the environment in which it will operate in the
future. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as at the date
of this Interim Management Report. Except as required by law and
regulatory requirements, we disclaim any obligation to update or
revise these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise.
- Fisher, M., Nathan, S. D., Hill, C., Marshall, J.,
Dejonckheere, F., Thuresson, P., & Maher, T. M. (2017).
Predicting Life Expectancy for Pirfenidone in Idiopathic Pulmonary
Fibrosis. Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy, 23(3-b
Suppl), S17 -S24.
https://doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2017.23.3-b.s17
- Dempsey, T., Payne, S. C., Sangaralingham, L. R., Yao, X.,
Shah, N., & Limper, A. H. (2021). Adoption of the Antifibrotic
Medications Pirfenidone and Nintedanib for Patients with Idiopathic
Pulmonary Fibrosis. Annals of the American Thoracic Society, 18(7),
1121–1128. https://doi.org/10.1513/annalsats.202007-901oc
- Roche 2022 Annual Report and Boehringer Ingelheim 2022
Financial Results
Financial Review
Reporting Framework
You should read the following discussion and analysis together
with our Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements, including the
notes thereto, set forth elsewhere in this report. Some of the
information contained in this discussion and analysis or set forth
elsewhere in this report, including information with respect to our
plans and strategy for our business and financing our business,
includes forward-looking statements that involve risks and
uncertainties. You should read this discussion and analysis in
conjunction with the risks identified in the “Risk Factor Annex" on
pages 186 to 223 of our “Annual Report and Accounts 2023”, also
included as Exhibit 15.1 to the Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2023 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
on April 25, 2024. As a result of many factors, our actual results
could differ materially from the results described in or implied by
these forward-looking statements.
Our unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements as of
June 30, 2024, and for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023,
have been prepared in accordance with International Accounting
Standard (“IAS”) 34 Interim Financial Reporting as adopted for use
in the UK and also comply fully with IAS 34 as issued by the
International Accounting Standards Board ("IASB"). This report
should be read in conjunction with the Group’s 2023 Annual Reports
and Accounts as of and for the year ended December 31, 2023.
The following discussion contains references to the Consolidated
Financial Statements of PureTech Health plc (the "Parent") and its
consolidated subsidiaries, together "the Group". These financial
statements consolidate PureTech Health plc’s subsidiaries and
include the Group’s interest in associates by way of equity method,
as well as investments held at fair value. Subsidiaries are those
entities over which the Group maintains control. Associates are
those entities in which the Group does not have control for
financial accounting purposes but maintains significant influence
over financial and operating policies. Where the Group has neither
control nor significant influence for financial accounting
purposes, or when the investment in associates is not in
instruments that would be considered equity for accounting
purposes, we recognize our holdings in such entity as an investment
at fair value with changes in fair value being recorded in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income/(Loss).
For purposes of our Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements,
each of our Founded Entities1 are considered to be either a
“subsidiary", an “associate” or an "investment held at fair value"
depending on whether the Group controls or maintains significant
influence over the financial and operating policies of the
respective entity at the respective period end date, and depending
on the form of the investment. For additional information regarding
the accounting treatment of these entities, see Note 1. Material
Accounting Policies to our Consolidated Financial Statements
included in our 2023 Annual Report and Accounts. For additional
information regarding our operating structure, see “Basis of
Presentation and Consolidation” below.
Business Background and Results Overview
The business background is discussed above in the Interim
Management Report, which describes the business development of our
Wholly-Owned Programs2 and Founded Entities.
Our ability to generate product revenue sufficient to achieve
profitability will depend on the successful development and
eventual commercialization of one or more therapeutic candidates of
our wholly-owned or Controlled Founded Entities3, which may or may
not occur. Historically, certain of our Founded Entities
therapeutics received marketing authorization from the FDA, but our
Wholly-Owned Programs have not generated revenue from product sales
to date.
Furthermore, our ability to achieve profitability will largely
rely on successfully monetizing our investment in Founded Entities,
including the sale of rights to royalties, entering into strategic
partnerships, and other related business development
activities.
We deconsolidated a number of our Founded Entities, specifically
Vedanta Biosciences, Inc. ("Vedanta") in March 2023, Sonde Health
Inc. ("Sonde") in 2022, Karuna Therapeutics, Inc. ("Karuna"), Vor
Biopharma Inc. ("Vor") and Gelesis in 2019, and Akili in 2018.
Any deconsolidation affects our financials in the following
manner:
- our ownership interest does not provide us with a controlling
financial interest;
- we no longer control the Founded Entity's assets and
liabilities, and as a result, we derecognize the assets,
liabilities and non-controlling interests related to the Founded
Entity from our financial statements;
- we record our retained investment in the Founded Entity at fair
value; and
- the resulting amount of any gain or loss is recognized.
We anticipate our expenses to continue to increase
proportionally in connection with execution of our strategy around
creating and supporting Founded Entities, as well as the ongoing
development activities related mostly to the advancement into
late-stage studies of the clinical programs within our Wholly-Owned
Programs. We also expect that our expenses and capital requirements
will increase in the near to mid-term as we:
- continue our research and development efforts;
- seek regulatory approvals for any therapeutic candidates that
successfully complete clinical trials; and
- add clinical, scientific, operational, financial and management
information systems and personnel, including personnel to support
our therapeutic development and potential future commercialization
claims.
More specifically, we anticipate that our internal research and
development spend will increase in the foreseeable future as we may
initiate additional clinical studies for our existing therapeutic
candidates, evaluate new therapeutic candidates for investment and
further development, progress additional therapeutic candidates
into the clinic, as well as advance our technology platforms.
- Founded Entities are comprised of the entities which the
Company incorporated and announced the incorporation as a Founded
Entity externally. It includes certain of the Company’s
wholly-owned subsidiaries which have been announced by the Company
as Founded Entities, Controlled Founded Entities3 and
deconsolidated Founded Entities. As of June 30, 2024,
deconsolidated Founded Entities included Akili Interactive Labs,
Inc., Karuna Therapeutics, Inc., Vor Bio, Inc., Gelesis, Inc.,
Sonde Health, Inc., and Vedanta Biosciences, Inc.
- Wholly-Owned Programs are comprised of the Company’s current
and future therapeutic candidates and technologies that are
developed by the Company's wholly-owned subsidiaries, whether they
were announced as a Founded Entity or not, and will be advanced
through with either the Company's funding or non-dilutive sources
of financing. As of June 30 ,2024, Wholly-Owned Programs were
developed by the wholly-owned subsidiaries including PureTech LYT,
Inc., PureTech LYT 100, Inc. and Gallop Oncology, Inc. and included
primarily the programs LYT-100, and LYT-200.
- Controlled Founded Entities are comprised of the Company’s
consolidated operational subsidiaries that currently have already
raised third-party dilutive capital. As of June 30, 2024,
Controlled Founded Entities included Entrega, Inc. and Seaport
Therapeutics.
In addition, with respect to our Founded Entities’ programs, we
anticipate that we will continue to fund a small portion of
development costs by strategically participating in such companies’
financings when we believe participation in such financings is in
the best interests of our shareholders. The form of any such
participation may include investment in public or private
financings, collaboration, partnership arrangements, and/or
licensing arrangements, among others. Our management and strategic
decision makers consider the future funding needs of our Founded
Entities and evaluate the needs and opportunities for returns with
respect to each of these Founded Entities routinely and on a
case-by-case basis.
As a result, we may need substantial additional funding in the
future, following the period described below in the Funding
Requirement section, to support our continuing operations and
pursue our growth strategy until such time as we can generate
sufficient revenue from product sales to support our operations, if
ever. Until such time, we expect to finance our operations through
a combination of monetization of our interests in our Founded
Entities, collaborations with third parties, or other sources. We
may be unable to raise additional funds or enter into such other
agreements or arrangements when needed on favorable terms, or at
all. If we are unable to raise capital or enter into such
agreements, as and when needed, we may have to delay, scale back or
discontinue the development and commercialization of one or more of
our wholly-owned therapeutic candidates.
Measuring Performance
The Financial Review discusses our operating and financial
performance, our cash flows and liquidity as well as our financial
position and our resources. The results of current period are
compared with the results of the comparative period in the prior
year.
Reported Performance
Reported performance considers all factors that have affected
the results of our business, as reflected in our Condensed
Consolidated Financial Statements.
Core Performance
Core performance measures are alternative performance measures
which are adjusted and non-IFRS measures. These measures cannot be
derived directly from our Condensed Consolidated Financial
Statements. We believe that these non-IFRS performance measures,
when provided in combination with reported performance, will
provide investors, analysts and other stakeholders with helpful
complementary information to better understand our financial
performance and our financial position from period to period. The
measures are also used by management for planning and reporting
purposes. The measures are not substitutable for IFRS financial
information and should not be considered superior to financial
information presented in accordance with IFRS.
Cash flow and liquidity
PureTech Level cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
Measure type: Core performance
Definition: Cash and cash
equivalents and short-term investments held at PureTech Health plc
and our wholly-owned subsidiaries.
Why we use it: PureTech Level cash,
cash equivalents and short-term investments is a measure that
provides valuable additional information with respect to cash, cash
equivalents and short-term investments available to fund the
Wholly-Owned Programs and make certain investments in Founded
Entities.
Recent Developments (subsequent to June 30, 2024)
The Group has evaluated subsequent events after June 30, 2024 up
to the date of issuance, August 28, 2024, of the Condensed
Consolidated Financial Statements, and has not identified any
recordable or disclosable events not otherwise reported in these
unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements or notes
thereto.
Financial Highlights
The following is the reconciliation of the amounts appearing in
our Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position to the
non-IFRS alternative performance measure described above:
(in thousands)
June 30 2024
December 31,
2023
Cash and cash equivalents
308,478
191,081
Short-term investments
191,938
136,062
Consolidated cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
500,416
327,143
Less: cash and cash equivalents held at
non-wholly owned subsidiaries
(99,778)
(1,097)
PureTech Level cash, cash equivalents
and short-term investments
$400,638
$326,046
Basis of Presentation and Consolidation
Our Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements consolidate the
financial information of PureTech Health plc, as well as its
subsidiaries, and include our interest in associates and
investments held at fair value, and are reported in reportable
segments as described below.
Basis for Segmentation
Our Directors are our strategic decision-makers. Our operating
segments are determined based on the financial information provided
to our Directors periodically for the purposes of allocating
resources and assessing performance. We have determined each of our
Wholly-Owned Programs represents an operating segment, and we have
aggregated each of these operating segments into one reportable
segment, the Wholly-Owned Programs segment. Each of our Controlled
Founded Entities represents an operating segment. We aggregate each
Controlled Founded Entity operating segment into one reportable
segment, the Controlled Founded Entities segment. The aggregation
is based on the high level of operational and financial
similarities of the operating segments. For our entities that do
not meet the definition of an operating segment, we present this
information in the Parent Company and Other column in our segment
footnote to reconcile the information in the segment discussion to
our Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements. Substantially all
of our revenue and profit generating activities are generated
within the United States and, accordingly, no geographical
disclosures are provided.
There was no change to the reportable segments in 2024, except
for the changes to the composition of the reportable segments as
described below.
In January 2024, we launched two new Founded Entities (Seaport
Therapeutics "Seaport" and Gallop Oncology "Gallop") to advance
certain programs within the Wholly-Owned Programs segment. The
financial results of these programs were included in the
Wholly-Owned Programs segment as of and for the year ended December
31, 2023. Upon raising dilutive third-party financing in April
2024, the financial results of Seaport are included within the
Controlled Founded Entities segment as the Group still maintains
control over this entity. As of June 30, 2024, Alivio became
dormant and did not meet the definition of operating segment. The
financial results of this entity were removed from the Wholly-Owned
Programs segment and are included in the Parent Company and Other
column. The corresponding information for 2023 has been restated to
include Alivio in the Parent Company and Other column, so that the
segment disclosures are presented on a comparable basis.
Results of Operations
The following table, which has been derived from our unaudited
financial statements for the six months ended June 30, 2024 and
2023, included herein, summarizes our results of operations for the
periods indicated, together with the changes in those items:
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in thousands)
2024
2023
Change
(2023 to 2024)
Contract revenue
$—
$750
$(750)
Grant revenue
288
2,400
(2,112)
Total revenue
288
3,150
(2,862)
Operating expenses:
General and administrative expenses
(27,758)
(26,166)
(1,592)
Research and development expenses
(38,928)
(53,146)
14,218
Operating income/(loss)
(66,398)
(76,163)
9,765
Other income/(expense):
Gain/(loss) on deconsolidation of
subsidiary
—
61,787
(61,787)
Gain/(loss) on investments held at fair
value
3,882
7,818
(3,936)
Realized gain/(loss) on sale of
investments
151
—
151
Gain/(loss) on investments in notes from
associates
11,612
(6,045)
17,657
Other income/(expense)
548
(1,134)
1,682
Other income/(expense)
16,193
62,426
(46,233)
Net finance income/(costs)
(1,468)
5,316
(6,784)
Share of net income/(loss) of associates
accounted for using the equity method
(3,357)
(5,324)
1,967
Income/(loss) before income
taxes
(55,030)
(13,744)
(41,286)
Tax benefit/(expense)
6,147
(11,807)
17,953
Net income/(loss) including
non-controlling interest
(48,883)
(25,551)
(23,333)
Net income/(loss) attributable to the
Owners of the Group
$(41,773)
$(25,004)
$(16,768)
Comparison of the Six Months Ended June
30, 2024 and 2023
Total Revenue
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in thousands)
2024
2023
Change
Contract Revenue:
Controlled Founded Entities
$—
$750
$(750)
Total Contract Revenue
—
750
(750)
Grant Revenue:
Wholly-Owned Programs
288
135
153
Parent Company and Other
—
2,265
(2,265)
Total Grant Revenue
288
2,400
(2,112)
Total Revenue
$288
$3,150
$(2,862)
Our total revenue was $0.3 million for the six months ended June
30, 2024, a decrease of $2.9 million, or 91 percent compared to the
six months ended June 30, 2023. The decrease in revenue was
primarily due to the $2.3 million reduction in Parent Company and
Other revenue which was mostly a result of the deconsolidation of
Vedanta from our financial statements in March 2023, as well as
$0.7 million reduction due to the completion of a revenue agreement
for Entrega, one of our Controlled Founded Entities.
Research and Development Expenses
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in thousands)
2024
2023
Change
Research and Development Expenses:
Wholly-Owned Programs
$(32,981)
$(45,139)
$(12,158)
Controlled Founded Entities
(5,710)
(368)
5,342
Parent Company and Other
(237)
(7,640)
(7,403)
Total Research and Development
Expenses:
$(38,928)
$(53,146)
$(14,218)
Our research and development expenses were $38.9 million for the
six months ended June 30, 2024, a decrease of $14.2 million, or 27
percent compared to the six months ended June 30, 2023. The
decrease in research and development expenses was driven by 1) our
reduced spending on clinical and CMC activities related to our
wholly-owned programs due to the prioritization of research and
development projects, whereby the Group elected to focus on
programs where it believes it has the highest probability of
success and reduced efforts in research and clinical stage projects
where such probability of success is lower, 2) the decrease in
employee related costs from lower headcount; and 3) the
deconsolidation of Vedanta in March 2023 which resulted in us no
longer including Vedanta’s research and development expenses in our
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Wholly-Owned Programs: a decrease of $12.2 million in research
and development expenses. $9.2 million of the decrease was due to
1) transfer of GLYPH platform, the related clinical programs and
employees to Seaport, the expense of which is included in
Controlled Founded Entities; 2) the prioritization of research and
development projects as discussed above; and 3) the decrease in
employee related costs from lower headcount. The remaining decrease
was due to a $1.0 million decrease in asset impairment costs, a
$0.6 million decrease in depreciation expense and a $1.4 million
decrease in legal and consulting services in the six months ended
June 30, 2024.
Controlled Founded Entities: an increase of $5.3 million in
research and development expense due to the transfer of GLYPH
platform, the related clinical programs and employees to
Seaport.
Parent Company and Other: a decrease of $7.4 million due to the
deconsolidation of Vedanta in March 2023, and the winding down of
the Alivio program and the entity became dormant as of June 30,
2024.
General and Administrative Expenses
Six Months Ended June 30,
(in thousands)
2024
2023
Change
General and Administrative Expenses:
Wholly-Owned Programs
$(4,450)
$(6,981)
$(2,531)
Controlled Founded Entities
(6,548)
(237)
6,311
Parent Company and Other
(16,759)
(18,947)
(2,188)
Total General and Administrative
Expenses
$(27,758)
$(26,166)
$1,592
Our general and administrative expenses were $27.8 million for
the six months ended June 30, 2024, an increase of $1.6 million, or
6 percent compared to the six months ended June 30, 2023. The
increase was primarily due to a $4.0 million increase in stock
based compensation largely resulting from stock awards granted to
Seaport employees, offset by a $2.9 million decrease from the
deconsolidation of Vedanta in March 2023.
Wholly-Owned Programs: a decrease of $2.5 million in general and
administrative expenses was primarily driven by a decrease of $2.0
million in management fees charged by the parent company.
Controlled Founded Entity: an increase of $6.3 million in
general and administrative expenses was primarily driven by the
establishment and operation of Seaport including a $1.6 million
increase in legal and advisory fees, $3.2 million increase in stock
based compensation expense and a $1.3 million increase in
payroll.
Parent Company and Other: a $2.2 million decrease in general and
administrative expenses was primarily attributable to a $2.9
million decrease due to the deconsolidation of Vedanta in March
2023, a $1.5 million decrease in legal advisory costs primarily
related to Gelesis notes and Merger Agreement in 2023, partially
offset by a $2.2 million increase in management fee.
Total Other Income/(Expense)
Total other income was $16.2 million for the six months ended
June 30, 2024 compared to $62.4 million for the six months ended
June 30, 2023, a decrease of $46.2 million, or 74 percent. The
decrease in other income was primarily attributable to the
following:
- one time gain of $61.8 million recognized in 2023 as a result
of the deconsolidation of Vedanta in March 2023, reflecting a
decrease in other income of $61.8 million.
- a gain of $11.6 million in investments in notes from associates
for the six months ended June 30, 2024 compared to a loss of $6.0
million for the six months ended June 30, 2023, reflecting an
increase in other income of $17.7 million.
Net Finance Income/(Costs)
Net finance costs was $1.5 million for the six months ended June
30, 2024, compared to net finance income of $5.3 million for the
six months ended June 30, 2023, an increase in net finance cost of
$6.8 million or 128 percent. The increase was primarily
attributable to the following:
- an increase in non-cash interest expense of $6.8 million
related to the sale of future royalties liability due to the six
months' accretion of the liability as well as the change to the
liability based on the updated cash flow forecast in the six months
ended June 30, 2024 as compared to the four months' accretion of
the liability for the six months ended June 30, 2023.
- an increase in finance costs of $4.3 million related to changes
in the fair value of subsidiary preferred share liabilities: an
income of $2.6 million for the reduction in fair value of Vedanta
and Follica preferred share liability for the six months ended June
30, 2023 compared to an expense of $1.6 million for the increase in
fair value of Seaport preferred share liability for the six months
ended June 30, 2024.
The above increases in finance costs were partially offset by an
increase in interest income of $4.0 million for the six months
ended June 30, 2024 due to increased cash and cash equivalent and
short-term investment balances as well as higher interest rates
earned for the period.
Share of Net Income/(Loss) of Associates Accounted for Using the
Equity Method
For the six months ended June 30, 2024, the share in net loss of
associates reported under the equity method was $3.4 million as
compared to the share in net loss of associates of $5.3 million for
the six months ended June 30, 2023, a decrease in loss of $2.0
million or 37 percent. The decrease was primarily attributable to a
decrease in Gelesis losses as it went bankrupt in October 2023 and
the carrying value of our investment in Gelesis was reduced to zero
as of December 31, 2023.
Taxation
For the six months ended June 30, 2024, the income tax benefit
was $6.1 million, compared to an income tax expense of $11.8
million for the six months ended June 30, 2023. The decrease in
income tax expense was primarily due to recording an income tax
benefit for the six months ended June 30, 2024, related to
generated tax credits, recognizing a capital loss from the Akili
investment, partially offset by a discrete income tax expense
related to the market-to-market investment adjustments, compared to
the recording of an income tax expense in the six months ended June
30, 2023 due to nonrecurring events of the sale of future royalties
to Royalty Pharma, partially offset by the deconsolidation of
Vedanta.
Material Accounting Policies and Significant Judgments and
Estimates
Our financial review of the financial condition and results of
operations is based on our interim financial statements, which we
have prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standards
(“IAS”) 34 Interim Financial Reporting as adopted for use in the UK
and also comply fully with IAS 34 as issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board (“IASB”). In the preparation of these
financial statements, we are required to make judgments, estimates
and assumptions about the carrying amounts of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. The
estimates and associated assumptions are based on historical
experience and other factors that are considered to be relevant.
Actual results may differ from these estimates under different
assumptions or conditions.
Our estimates and assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis.
Revisions to accounting estimates are recognized in the period in
which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that
period or in the period of the revisions and future periods if the
revision affects both current and future periods.
The accounting policies most critical to the judgments and
estimates used in the preparation of our financial statements have
not changed from those disclosed in Note 1, Material Accounting
policies of the accompanying notes to the Consolidated Financial
Statements included in our 2023 Annual Report and Accounts except
for the adoption of new and amended IFRS Accounting Standards as
set out in Note 2. New Standards and Interpretations to our
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Cash Flow and Liquidity
Our cash flows may fluctuate and are difficult to forecast and
will depend on many factors, including:
- the expenses incurred in the development of wholly-owned and
Controlled Founded Entity therapeutic candidates;
- the revenue, if any, generated by wholly-owned and
Controlled-Founded Entity therapeutic candidates;
- the revenue, if any, generated from licensing and royalty
agreements with Founded Entities;
- the financing requirements of the Wholly-Owned Programs and our
Founded Entities;
- the investing activities including the monetization, through
sale, of shares held in our public Founded Entities; and
- repurchases of our shares
As of June 30, 2024, we had consolidated cash and cash
equivalents of $308.5 million and short term investments of $191.9
million. As of June 30, 2024, we had PureTech Level cash, cash
equivalents and short-term investments of $400.6 million. PureTech
Level cash, cash equivalents and short term investments is a
non-IFRS measure (for a definition of PureTech Level cash, cash
equivalents and short term investments and a reconciliation to the
IFRS number, see the section Measuring Performance earlier in this
Financial review).
Cash Flows
The following table summarizes our cash flows for each of the
periods presented:
(in thousands)
2024
2023
Change
Net cash used in operating activities
$(80,014)
$(65,133)
$(14,881)
Net cash provided by investing
activities
236,512
173,885
62,627
Net cash provided by (used in) financing
activities
(39,101)
91,897
(130,998)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and
cash equivalents
$117,397
$200,649
$(83,252)
Operating Activities
Net cash used in operating activities was $80.0 million for the
six months ended June 30, 2024, as compared to $65.1 million for
the six months ended June 30, 2023, an increase of $14.9 million in
net cash used in operating activities. The increase in cash
outflows is primarily attributable to $15.1 million increase in
estimated tax payments related to the sale of the Karuna shares and
$19.0 million change in operating assets and liabilities including
$10.8 million change in operating assets largely related to
accounts receivable and $8.2 million change in operating
liabilities due to the timing of payments in the normal course of
business, partially offset by $9.8 million decrease in operating
loss and $7.2 million increase in cash receipts from interest
income.
Investing Activities
Net cash provided by investing activities was $236.5 million for
the six months ended June 30, 2024, as compared to net cash
provided by investing activities of $173.9 million for the six
months ended June 30, 2023, an increase of $62.6 million in net
cash provided by investing activities.
The increase in the net cash inflow was primarily attributed to
the $292.7 million proceeds received from the sale of Karuna shares
in 2024, and two investing cash outflows in 2023 that did not occur
in 2024 ($15.4 million investments in subsidiary notes, $13.8
million cash deduction from the deconsolidation of Vedanta)
partially offset by increased cash outflow from short-term
investment activities (redemptions, net of purchases) amounting to
$258.8 million.
Financing Activities
Net cash used by financing activities was $39.1 million for the
six months ended June 30, 2024, as compared to net cash provided by
financing activities of $91.9 million for the six months ended June
30, 2023, a decrease of $131.0 million in net cash from financing
activities. The decrease in net cash from financing activities was
primarily attributable to $100.0 million received during the six
months ended June 30, 2023 in respect of the sale of future Karuna
royalties, and no such proceeds received during the six months
ended June 30, 2024. The decrease is further attributable to the
$101.6 million cash used for the purchase of shares in connection
with the Tender Offer (see note 10. Equity). The decreases were
partially offset by an increase of $68.1 million proceeds received
from the sale of preferred shares of Seaport.
Funding Requirements
We have incurred operating losses since inception. Based on our
current plans, we believe our existing financial assets as of June
30, 2024 will be sufficient to fund our operations and capital
expenditure requirements for at least three years. We expect to
incur substantial additional expenditures in the near term to
support our ongoing and future activities. We anticipate we will
continue to incur net operating losses for the foreseeable future
to support our existing Founded Entities and newly launched Founded
Entities (Seaport Therapeutics and Gallop Oncology), and our
strategy around creating and supporting other Founded Entities,
should they require it, to reach significant development milestones
over the period of the assessment in conjunction with our external
partners. We also expect to incur significant costs to advance our
Wholly-Owned Programs, to continue research and development
efforts, to discover and progress new therapeutic candidates and to
fund the Group’s operating costs for at least three years. Our
ability to fund our therapeutic development and clinical operations
as well as ability to fund our existing, newly founded and future
Founded Entities, will depend on the amount and timing of cash
received from planned financings, monetization of shares of public
Founded Entities and potential business development activities. Our
future capital requirements will depend on many factors,
including:
- the costs, timing and outcomes of clinical trials and
regulatory reviews associated with our wholly-owned therapeutic
candidates;
- the costs of preparing, filing and prosecuting patent
applications and maintaining, enforcing and defending intellectual
property related claims;
- the emergence of competing technologies and products and other
adverse marketing developments;
- the effect on our therapeutic and product development
activities of actions taken by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (“FDA”), the European Medicines Agency (“EMA”) or
other regulatory authorities;
- the number and types of future therapeutics we develop and
support with the goal of commercialization;
- the costs, timing and outcomes of identifying, evaluating, and
investing in technologies and drug candidates to develop as
Wholly-Owned Programs or as Founded Entities;
- the costs of commercialization activities for any of the
therapeutic candidates within our Wholly Owned Program that receive
marketing approval, including the costs and timing of establishing
therapeutic sales, marketing, distribution and manufacturing
capabilities, or entering into strategic collaborations with third
parties to leverage or access these capabilities; and
- the success of our Founded Entities and their need for
additional capital.
A change in the outcome of any of these or other variables with
respect to the development of any of our wholly-owned therapeutic
candidates could significantly change the costs and timing
associated with the development of that therapeutic candidate.
Further, our operating plans may change, and we may need
additional funds to meet operational needs and capital requirements
for clinical trials and other research and development activities.
We currently have no credit facility or other committed sources of
capital beyond our existing financial assets. Because of the
numerous risks and uncertainties associated with the development
and commercialization of our wholly-owned therapeutic candidates,
we have only a general estimate of the amounts of increased capital
outlays and operating expenditures associated with our current and
anticipated therapeutic development programs and these may change
in the future.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income/(Loss) (Unaudited)
For the six months ended June
30
Note
2024
$000s
2023
$000s
Contract revenue
—
750
Grant revenue
288
2,400
Total revenue
288
3,150
Operating expenses:
General and administrative expenses
(27,758)
(26,166)
Research and development expenses
(38,928)
(53,146)
Operating income/(loss)
(66,398)
(76,163)
Other income/(expense):
Gain/(loss) on deconsolidation of
subsidiary
4
—
61,787
Gain/(loss) on investments held at fair
value
4
3,882
7,818
Realized gain/(loss) on sale of
investments
4
151
—
Gain/(loss) on investments in notes from
associates
6
11,612
(6,045)
Other income/(expense)
548
(1,134)
Other income/(expense)
16,193
62,426
Finance income/(costs):
Finance income
8
11,732
7,731
Finance costs – contractual
8
(1,036)
(1,338)
Finance income/(costs) – fair value
accounting
8
(1,613)
2,650
Finance costs – non cash interest expense
related to sale of future royalties
12
(10,551)
(3,726)
Net finance income/(costs)
(1,468)
5,316
Share of net income/(loss) of associates
accounted for using the equity method
5
(3,357)
(5,324)
Income/(loss) before taxes
(55,030)
(13,744)
Tax benefit/(expense)
18
6,147
(11,807)
Income/(loss) for the period
(48,883)
(25,551)
Other comprehensive
income/(loss):
Items that are or may be reclassified as
profit or loss
Equity-accounted associate – share of
other comprehensive income (loss)
—
92
Total other comprehensive
income/(loss)
—
92
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for
the period
(48,883)
(25,458)
Income/(loss) attributable to:
Owners of the Group
(41,773)
(25,004)
Non-controlling interests
(7,111)
(546)
(48,883)
(25,551)
Comprehensive income/(loss)
attributable to:
Owners of the Group
(41,773)
(24,912)
Non-controlling interests
(7,111)
(546)
(48,883)
(25,458)
$
$
Earnings/(loss) per share:
Basic earnings/(loss) per share
9
(0.15)
(0.09)
Diluted earnings/(loss) per share
9
(0.15)
(0.09)
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position (Unaudited)
As of
Note
June 30, 2024
$000s
December 31, 2023
$000s
Assets
Non-current assets
Property and equipment, net
8,393
9,536
Right of use asset, net
8,943
9,825
Intangible assets, net
906
906
Investments held at fair value
4
29,030
317,841
Investment in associates – equity
method
5
—
3,185
Investments in notes from associates
6
16,212
4,600
Deferred tax assets
6,778
—
Other non-current assets
878
878
Total non-current assets
71,140
346,771
Current assets
Trade and other receivables
2,055
2,376
Income tax receivable
—
11,746
Prepaid expenses
4,703
4,309
Other financial assets
1,636
1,628
Short-term investments
191,938
136,062
Cash and cash equivalents
308,478
191,081
Total current assets
508,810
347,201
Total assets
579,950
693,973
Equity and liabilities
Equity
Share capital
4,860
5,461
Share premium
290,262
290,262
Treasury stock
(46,892)
(44,626)
Merger reserve
138,506
138,506
Translation reserve
182
182
Other reserve
10
(8,541)
(9,538)
(Accumulated deficit)/Retained
earnings
(62,510)
83,820
Equity attributable to the owners of
the Group
315,867
464,066
Non-controlling interests
14
(9,661)
(5,835)
Total equity
306,206
458,232
Non-current liabilities
Sale of future royalties liability,
non-current
12
117,458
110,159
Deferred tax liability
—
52,462
Lease liability, non-current
16,422
18,250
Liability for share-based awards
7
1,550
3,501
Total non-current liabilities
135,430
184,371
Current liabilities
Lease liability, current
3,574
3,394
Trade and other payables
15
31,445
44,107
Sale of future royalties liability,
current
12
3,252
—
Income taxes payable
26,135
—
Subsidiary:
Notes payable
4,027
3,699
Preferred shares
11, 13
69,882
169
Total current liabilities
138,314
51,370
Total liabilities
273,744
235,741
Total equity and liabilities
579,950
693,973
Please refer to the accompanying Notes to the consolidated
financial information. Registered number: 09582467.
The Consolidated Financial Statements were approved by the Board
of Directors and authorized for issuance on August 28, 2024 and
signed on its behalf by:
Bharatt Chowrira Chief Executive Officer August 28,
2024
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Changes in Equity (Unaudited)
For the six months ended June
30
Share Capital
Treasury Shares
Note
Shares
Amount
$000s
Share
premium
$000s
Shares
Amount
$000s
Merger
reserve
$000s
Translation
reserve
$000s
Other
reserve
$000s
Retained
earnings/
(accumulated
deficit)
$000s
Total Parent
equity
$000s
Non-
controlling
interests
$000s
Total
Equity
$000s
Balance January 1, 2023
289,161,653
5,455
289,624
(10,595,347)
(26,492)
138,506
89
(14,478)
149,516
542,220
5,369
547,589
Net income/(loss)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(25,004)
(25,004)
(546)
(25,551)
Other comprehensive income/(loss) for the
period
—
—
—
—
92
—
—
92
—
92
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for
the period
—
—
—
—
—
—
92
—
(25,004)
(24,912)
(546)
(25,458)
Deconsolidation of Subsidiary
4
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(9,085)
(9,085)
Exercise of stock options
7
306,506
6
638
149,226
327
—
—
(10)
—
961
—
961
Purchase of Treasury stock
10
—
—
—
(2,510,887)
(7,276)
—
—
—
—
(7,276)
—
(7,276)
Equity-settled share-based awards
7
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1,465
—
1,465
277
1,742
Settlement of restricted stock units
7
—
—
—
161,678
337
—
—
87
—
424
—
424
Expiration of share options in
subsidiary
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
786
—
786
(786)
—
Other
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(6)
(6)
Balance June 30, 2023
289,468,159
5,461
290,262
(12,795,330)
(33,105)
138,506
182
(12,149)
124,512
513,669
(4,778)
508,891
Balance January 1, 2024
289,468,159
5,461
290,262
(17,614,428)
(44,626)
138,506
182
(9,538)
83,820
464,066
(5,835)
458,232
Net income/(loss)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(41,773)
(41,773)
(7,111)
(48,883)
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for
the period
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(41,773)
(41,773)
(7,111)
(48,883)
Exercise of stock options
7
—
—
—
412,729
1,041
—
—
(146)
—
895
—
895
Repurchase and cancellation of ordinary
shares from Tender Offer
10
(31,540,670)
(600)
—
—
—
—
—
600
(104,558)
(104,558)
—
(104,558)
Purchase of Treasury stock
10
—
—
—
(1,903,990)
(4,819)
—
—
—
—
(4,819)
—
(4,819)
Equity-settled share-based awards
expense
7
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
754
—
754
3,285
4,039
Settlement of restricted stock units
7
—
—
—
599,512
1,512
—
—
(211)
—
1,301
—
1,301
Expiration of share options in
subsidiary
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1
—
1
(1)
—
Balance June 30, 2024
257,927,489
4,860
290,262
(18,506,177)
(46,892)
138,506
182
(8,541)
(62,510)
315,867
(9,661)
306,206
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Cash Flows (Unaudited)
For the six months ended June
30
Note
2024
$000s
2023
$000s
Cash flows from operating activities
Income/(loss) for the period
(48,883)
(25,551)
Adjustments to reconcile income/(loss) for
the period to net cash used in operating activities:
Non-cash items:
Depreciation and amortization
1,814
3,061
Share-based compensation expense
7
4,648
1,256
(Gain)/loss on investment held at fair
value
4
(3,882)
(7,818)
Realized gain on sale of investments
4
(151)
—
Gain on deconsolidation of subsidiary
4
—
(61,787)
Share of net loss of associates accounted
for using the equity method
5
3,357
5,324
(Gain)/loss on investments in notes from
associates
6
(11,612)
6,045
(Gain)/loss on disposal of assets
(23)
522
Impairment of fixed assets
45
1,066
Income taxes, net
18
(6,147)
11,807
Finance (income)/costs, net
8
1,468
(5,316)
Changes in operating assets and
liabilities:
Trade and other receivables
320
9,243
Prepaid expenses
(394)
1,484
Deferred revenue
—
(283)
Trade and other payables
15
(16,883)
(9,318)
Other
—
964
Income taxes paid
(15,213)
(150)
Interest received
12,196
5,444
Interest paid
(675)
(1,127)
Net cash used in operating
activities
(80,014)
(65,133)
Cash flows from investing activities:
Purchase of property and equipment
—
(70)
Proceeds from sale of property and
equipment
188
590
Investment in convertible notes and
warrants from associates
7
—
(15,350)
Sale of investments held at fair value
4
292,672
—
Short-term loan to associate
660
—
Repayment of short-term loan from
associate
(660)
—
Cash derecognized upon loss of control
over subsidiary (see table below)
4
—
(13,784)
Purchases of short-term investments
(213,035)
—
Proceeds from maturity of short-term
investments
156,687
202,500
Net cash provided by investing
activities
236,512
173,885
Cash flows from financing activities:
Receipt of cash from sale of future
royalties
12
—
100,000
Issuance of subsidiary preferred
Shares
11
68,100
—
Payment of lease liability
(1,648)
(1,764)
Exercise of stock options
895
961
Repurchase of ordinary shares
10
(101,629)
—
Purchase of treasury stock
10
(4,819)
(7,276)
Other
—
(23)
Net cash provided by (used in)
financing activities
(39,101)
91,897
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents
117,397
200,649
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of
year
191,081
149,866
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
period
308,478
350,515
Supplemental disclosure of non-cash
investment and financing activities:
Purchase of intangible assets not yet paid
in cash
—
200
Repurchase of ordinary shares not yet paid in cash
2,929
—
Settlement of restricted stock units
through issuance of equity
1,301
424
Supplemental disclosure of non-cash investment and financing
activities (continued):
Assets, Liabilities and non-controlling interests in
deconsolidated subsidiary
2023
$000s
Trade and other receivables
(702)
Prepaid assets
(3,516)
Property, plant and equipment, net
(8,092)
Right of use asset, net
(2,477)
Trade and other Payables
15,078
Deferred revenue
1,902
Lease liabilities (including current
potion)
4,146
Long-term loan (including current
portion)
15,446
Subsidiary preferred shares and
warrants
24,568
Other assets and liabilities, net
(323)
Non-controlling interest
9,085
55,115
Investment retained in deconsolidated
subsidiary
20,456
Gain on deconsolidation
(61,787)
Cash in deconsolidated
subsidiary
13,784
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial
statements.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
(Amounts in thousands, except share and per share data, or
exercise price and conversion price)
1. General information
Description of Business
PureTech Health plc (the “Parent”) is a public biotherapeutics
company dedicated to changing the treatment paradigm for
devastating diseases. It is incorporated, domiciled and registered
in the United Kingdom (“UK”). The registered number is 09582467 and
the registered address is 13th Floor, One Angel Court, London, EC2R
7HJ, United Kingdom.
The Parent and its subsidiaries are together referred to as the
“Group”. The interim consolidated financial statements of the Group
(the "Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements" or the “Interim
Financial Statements”) consolidate those of the Parent and its
subsidiaries.
The accounting policies are consistent with those of the
previous financial year and corresponding interim reporting period,
except for the adoption of new and amended IFRS Accounting
Standards as set out below in Note 2. New Standards and
Interpretations.
Basis of accounting
These Interim Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with International Accounting Standards (IAS) 34 Interim
Financial Reporting as adopted for use in the UK and also comply
fully with IAS 34 as issued by the International Accounting
Standards Board ("IASB"). The Interim Financial Statements should
be read in conjunction with the Group’s Consolidated Financial
Statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2023. The
Interim Financial Statements do not include all the information
required for a complete set of financial statements in accordance
with International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS"). However,
selected explanatory notes are included to explain events and
transactions that are significant to an understanding of the
changes in the Group’s financial position and performance since the
last annual consolidated financial information included in the
Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended December 31, 2023,
which was prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International
Financial Reporting Standards and also complied fully with
International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the IASB.
Certain amounts in the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
and accompanying notes may not add due to rounding. All percentages
have been calculated using unrounded amounts.
These Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements do not
comprise statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 435 of
the Companies Act 2006. The comparative figures for the six months
ended June 30, 2023 are not the Group’s statutory accounts for that
financial year. Those accounts were reported upon by the Group’s
auditors and delivered to the registrar of companies. The report of
the auditors was unqualified, did not include a reference to any
matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis
without qualifying their report and did not contain statements
under Section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006.
The unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
reflect all adjustments of a normal recurring nature that are
necessary for a fair statement of the results for the interim
periods presented. Interim results are not necessarily indicative
of results for a full year.
As of June 30, 2024 the Group had cash and cash equivalents of
$308,478 and short term investments of $191,938. Considering the
Group’s financial position as of June 30, 2024 and its principal
risks and opportunities, a going concern analysis has been prepared
for at least the twelve-month period from the date of signing the
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements ("the going concern
period") utilizing realistic scenarios and applying a severe but
plausible downside scenario. Even under the downside scenario, the
analysis demonstrates the Group continues to maintain sufficient
liquidity headroom and continues to comply with all financial
obligations. Therefore, the Board of Directors ("Directors")
believes the Group is adequately resourced to continue in
operational existence for at least the twelve-month period from the
date of signing the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Accordingly, the Directors considered it appropriate to adopt the
going concern basis of accounting in preparing the Condensed
Consolidated Financial Statements.
These Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements were
authorized for issue by the Company’s Board of Directors on August
28, 2024.
Material Accounting policies
There have been no significant changes in the Group’s accounting
policies from those disclosed in our Consolidated Financial
Statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2023. The
significant accounting policies used for half-year financial
reporting are disclosed in Note 1, Material Accounting policies of
the accompanying notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements
included in our 2023 Annual Report and Accounts.
2. New Standards and Interpretations
The Group has applied Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of
Financial Statements: Classification of Liabilities as Current or
Non-Current for the first time for its interim reporting period
ended June 30, 2024. This amendment did not have any impact on the
amounts recognized in prior and current periods.
In April 2024, IFRS 18, Presentation and Disclosure in Financial
Statements was issued to achieve comparability of the financial
performance of similar entities. The standard, which replaces IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements, impacts the presentation of
primary financial statements and notes, including the statement of
earnings where companies will be required to present separate
categories of income and expense for operating, investing, and
financing activities with prescribed subtotals for each new
category. The standard will also require management-defined
performance measures to be explained and included in a separate
note within the consolidated financial statements. The standard is
effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2027, including interim financial statements, and
requires retrospective application. The Group is currently
assessing the impact of the new standard.
Certain other new accounting standards, interpretations, and
amendments to existing standards have been published that are
effective for annual periods commencing on or after January 1, 2025
and have not been early adopted by the Group in preparing the
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements. These standards,
amendments or interpretations are not expected to have a material
impact on the Group in the prior and current periods.
3. Segment Information
Basis for Segmentation
The Directors are the Group’s chief operating decision-makers.
The Group’s operating segments are determined based on the
financial information provided to the Board of Directors
periodically for the purposes of allocating resources and assessing
performance. The Group has determined each of its Wholly-Owned
Programs represents an operating segment and the Group has
aggregated each of these operating segments into one reportable
segment, the Wholly-Owned Programs segment. Each of the Group’s
Controlled Founded Entities represents an operating segment. The
Group aggregates each Controlled Founded Entity operating segment
into one reportable segment, the Controlled Founded Entities
segment. The aggregation is based on the high level of operational
and financial similarities of the operating segments. For the
Group’s entities that do not meet the definition of an operating
segment, the Group presents this information in the Parent Company
and Other column in its segment footnote to reconcile the
information in this footnote to the Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements. Substantially all of the Group’s revenue and
profit generating activities are generated within the United States
and, accordingly, no geographical disclosures are provided.
Following is the description of the Group's reportable
segments:
Wholly-Owned Programs
The Wholly-Owned Programs segment is advancing Wholly-Owned
Programs which are focused on treatments for patients with
devastating diseases. The Wholly-Owned Programs segment is
comprised of the technologies that are wholly-owned and will be
advanced through with either the Group's funding or non-dilutive
sources of financing. The operational management of the
Wholly-Owned Programs segment is conducted by the PureTech Health
team, which is responsible for the strategy, business development,
and research and development.
Controlled Founded Entities
The Controlled Founded Entities segment is comprised of the
Group’s consolidated operational subsidiaries as of June 30, 2024
that either have, or have plans to hire, independent management
teams and currently have already raised third-party dilutive
capital. These subsidiaries have active research and development
programs and have entered into an equity or debt investment
partner, who will provide additional industry knowledge and access
to networks, as well as additional funding to continue the pursued
growth of the entity.
The Group’s entities that were determined not to meet the
definition of an operating segment are included in the Parent
Company and Other column to reconcile the information in this
footnote to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements. This
column captures activities not directly attributable to the Group's
operating segments and includes the activities of the Parent,
corporate support functions and certain research and development
support functions that are not directly attributable to a strategic
business segment as well as the elimination of intercompany
transactions. This column also captures the operating results for
the deconsolidated entities through the date of deconsolidation
(e.g. Vedanta in 2023) and accounting for the Group's holdings in
Founded Entities for which control has been lost, which primarily
represents: the activity associated with deconsolidating an entity
when the Group no longer controls the entity (e.g. Vedanta in
2023), the gain or loss on the Group's investments accounted for at
fair value (e.g. the Group's ownership stakes in Karuna, Vor and
Akili) and the Group's net income or loss of associates accounted
for using the equity method.
(The term "Founded Entities" refers to entities which the
Company incorporated and announced the incorporation as a Founded
Entity externally. It includes certain of the Company’s
wholly-owned subsidiaries which have been announced by the Company
as Founded Entities, Controlled Founded Entities and deconsolidated
Founded Entities.)
In January 2024, the Group launched two new Founded Entities
(Seaport Therapeutics "Seaport" and Gallop Oncology "Gallop") to
advance certain programs from the Wholly-Owned Programs segment.
The financial results of these programs were included in the
Wholly-Owned Programs segment as of and for the year ended December
31, 2023. Upon raising dilutive third-party financing in April
2024, the financial results of Seaport are included within the
Controlled Founded Entities Segment as the Group still maintains
control over this entity.
As of June 30, 2024, Alivio became dormant and did not meet the
definition of operating segment. The financial results of this
entity were removed from the Wholly-Owned Programs segment and are
included in the Parent Company and Other column. The corresponding
information for 2023 has been restated to include Alivio in the
Parent Company and Other column so that the segment disclosures are
presented on a comparable basis.
The Group’s Board of Directors reviews segment performance and
allocates resources based upon revenue, operating loss as well as
the funds available for each segment. The Board of Directors does
not review any other information for purposes of assessing segment
performance or allocating resources.
For the six months ended June
30, 2024
Wholly-Owned
Programs
$
Controlled
Founded Entities
$
Parent Company
and
Other
$
Consolidated
$
Contract revenue
—
—
—
—
Grant revenue
288
—
—
288
Total revenue
288
—
—
288
General and administrative expenses
(4,450)
(6,548)
(16,759)
(27,758)
Research and development expenses
(32,981)
(5,710)
(237)
(38,928)
Total operating expense
(37,431)
(12,258)
(16,997)
(66,686)
Operating income/(loss)
(37,143)
(12,258)
(16,997)
(66,398)
Income/expenses not allocated to
segments
Other income/(expense):
Gain/(loss) on investment held at fair
value
3,882
Realized loss on sale of investments
151
Gain/(loss) on investment in notes from
associates
11,612
Other income/(expense)
548
Total other income/(expense)
16,193
Net finance income/(costs)
(1,468)
Share of net income/(loss) of associates
accounted for using the equity method
(3,357)
Income/(loss) before taxes
(55,030)
As of June 30, 2024
Available Funds
Cash and cash equivalents
24,781
99,359
184,338
308,478
Short-term Investments
—
—
191,938
191,938
Consolidated cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
24,781
99,359
376,276
500,416
For the six months ended June 30,
2023
Wholly-Owned
Programs
$
Controlled
Founded Entities
$
Parent
Company and
Other
$
Consolidated
$
Contract revenue
—
750
—
750
Grant revenue
135
—
2,265
2,400
Total revenue
135
750
2,265
3,150
General and administrative expenses
(6,981)
(237)
(18,947)
(26,166)
Research and development expenses
(45,139)
(368)
(7,640)
(53,146)
Total Operating expenses
(52,120)
(605)
(26,588)
(79,312)
Operating income/(loss)
(51,985)
145
(24,323)
(76,163)
Income/expenses not allocated to
segments
Other income/(expense):
Gain on deconsolidation
61,787
Gain/(loss) on investment held at fair
value
7,818
Gain/(loss) on investment in notes from
associates
(6,045)
Other income/(expense)
(1,134)
Total other income/(expense)
62,426
Net finance income/(costs)
5,316
Share of net income/(loss) of associate
accounted for using the equity method
(5,324)
Income/(loss) before taxes
(13,744)
As of December 31, 2023
Available Funds
Cash and cash equivalents
1,895
675
188,511
191,081
Short-term Investments
—
—
136,062
136,062
Consolidated cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments
1,895
675
324,573
327,143
4. Investments Held at Fair Value
Investments held at fair value include both unlisted and listed
securities held by the Group. These investments, which include
interests in Akili, Vor, Sonde, Vedanta and other insignificant
investments, are initially measured at fair value and are
subsequently re-measured at fair value at each reporting date with
changes in the fair value recorded through profit and loss. See
Note 13. Financial Instruments for information regarding the
valuation of these instruments. Activities related to such
investments during the periods are shown below:
Investments held at fair value
$
Balance as of December 31, 2023 and
January 1, 2024
317,841
Sale of Karuna shares
(292,672)
Gain realised on sale of investments
151
Gain – change in fair value through profit
and loss
3,882
Balance as of June 30, 2024 before
allocation of equity method loss to long-term interest
("LTI")
29,202
Equity method loss recorded against
LTI
(172)
Balance as of June 30, 2024 after
allocation of equity method loss to LTI
29,030
Vedanta
On March 1, 2023 Vedanta issued convertible debt to a syndicate
of investors. The Group did not participate in this round of
financing. As part of the issuance of the debt, the convertible
debt holders were granted representation on Vedanta's Board of
Directors and the Group lost control over the Vedanta's Board of
Directors and the power to direct the relevant Vedanta activities.
Consequently, Vedanta was deconsolidated on March 1, 2023 and its
results of operations were included in the Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements through the date of deconsolidation.
Following deconsolidation, the Group still has significant
influence over Vedanta through its voting interest in Vedanta and
its remaining representation on Vedanta's Board of Directors.
However, the Group only holds convertible preferred shares in
Vedanta that do not provide their holders with access to returns
associated with a residual equity interest, and as such, are
accounted for under IFRS 9, as investments held at fair value with
changes in fair value recorded in profit and loss. Under IFRS 9,
the preferred share investments are categorized as debt instruments
that are presented at fair value through profit and loss because
the amounts receivable do not represent solely payments of
principal and interest.
Upon deconsolidation, the Group derecognized its assets,
liabilities and non-controlling interest in respect of Vedanta and
recorded its aforementioned investment in Vedanta at fair value.
The deconsolidation resulted in a gain of $61,787.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and June 30, 2023, the
Group recognized a loss of $3,648 and $2,171, respectively for the
changes in the fair value of the investment in Vedanta that was
included in gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value within
the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss). The fair value of the Group’s investment in Vedanta
was $10,505 and $14,153 as of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023,
respectively.
Karuna
As of December 31, 2023, the Group held 886,885 shares or 2.3
percent of total outstanding Karuna common stock with fair value of
$280,708. In March 2024, Karuna common shares were acquired by
Bristol Myers Squibb ("BMS") for $330 per share in accordance with
the terms of a definitive merger agreement signed in December 2023.
As a result of this transaction, the Group received total proceeds
of $292,672 before income tax in exchange for its holding of
886,885 shares of Karuna common stock.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recognized a gain of $11,813 and $21,458, respectively, for the
changes in the fair value of its investment in Karuna that was
included in gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value within
the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
Sonde
On May 25, 2022, Sonde completed a Series B preferred share
financing, which resulted in the Group losing control over Sonde
and the deconsolidation of Sonde.
Following deconsolidation, the Group still had significant
influence in Sonde through its voting interest in Sonde and its
remaining representation on Sonde's Board of Directors. The Group
holds Preferred A-1, A-2 and B shares. The Preferred A-1 shares
have the same terms as common stock, and provide their shareholders
with access to returns associated with a residual equity ownership
in Sonde. Consequently, the investment in Preferred A-1 shares is
accounted for under the equity method. See Note 5. Investments in
Associates. The convertible Preferred A-2 and B shares, however, do
not provide their shareholders with access to returns associated
with a residual equity interest, and as such, are accounted for
under IFRS 9, as investments held at fair value with changes in
fair value recorded in profit and loss. Under IFRS 9, the A-2 and B
preferred share investments are categorized as debt instruments
that are presented at fair value through profit and loss because
the amounts receivable do not represent solely payments of
principal and interest.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recognized a gain of $163, and a loss of $167, respectively, for
the change in the fair value of its investment in Sonde that were
included in gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value within
the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss). The fair value of the Group’s investment in Sonde
was $10,571 and $10,408 as of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023,
respectively. As the Group’s investment in
Sonde is considered to be a long term interest, a loss of $172
from Sonde’s equity method of accounting was applied to the
investment balance, reducing the balance to $10,399.
Vor
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recognized a loss of $3,340 and $9,512, respectively, for the
change in the fair value of its investment in Vor that was included
in gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value within the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income/(Loss).
The fair value of the Group’s investment in Vor was $2,672 and
$6,012 as of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.
Akili
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recognized a loss of $985 and $354, respectively, for the changes
in the fair value of its investment in Akili that were included in
gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value within the Condensed
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income/(Loss). The fair
value of the Group’s investment in Akilli was $5,437 and $6,422 as
of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.
On July 2, 2024, Akili was acquired by Virtual Therapeutics. As
a result of this transaction, the Group received total proceeds of
$5,437 before income taxes in exchange for its holding of
12,527,476 shares of Akili common stock.
5. Investments in Associates
Gelesis
Gelesis was founded by the Group and raised funding through
preferred shares financings as well as issuances of warrants and
loans. As of July 1, 2019, Gelesis was deconsolidated from the
Group’s financial statements. Upon deconsolidation, the preferred
shares and warrants held by the Group fell under the guidance of
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and were treated as financial assets
held at fair value and the investment in common shares of Gelesis
was subject to IAS 28 Investment in Associates as the Group had
significant influence over Gelesis.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the Group entered into
agreements with Gelesis to purchase senior secured convertible
promissory notes and warrants for shares of Gelesis common stock
(see Note 6. Investment in Notes from Associates). The warrants to
purchase shares of Gelesis common stock represented potential
voting rights to the Group and it is therefore necessary to
consider whether they were substantive. If these potential voting
rights were substantive and the Group had the practical ability to
exercise the rights and take control of greater than 50% of Gelesis
common stock, the Group would be required to consolidate Gelesis
under the accounting standards.
In February 2023, the Group obtained warrants to purchase
23,688,047 shares of Gelesis common stock (the “February Warrants”)
at an exercise price of $0.2744 per share. The exercise of the
February Warrants was subject to the approval of the Gelesis
stockholders until May 1, 2023. On May 1, 2023, stockholder
approval was no longer required for the Group to exercise the
February Warrants. The potential voting rights associated with the
February Warrants were not substantive as the exercise price of the
February Warrants was at a significant premium to the fair value of
the Gelesis common stock.
In May 2023, the Group obtained warrants to purchase 235,441,495
shares of Gelesis common stock (the “May Warrants”). The May
Warrants were exercisable at the option of the Group and had an
exercise price of either $0.0182 or $0.0142. The May Warrants were
substantive as the Group would have benefited from exercising such
warrants since their exercise price was at the money or at an
insignificant premium over the fair value of the Gelesis common
stock. However, that benefit from exercising the May Warrants only
existed for a short period of time because in June 2023, the
potential voting rights associated with the May Warrants were
impacted by the terms and conditions of a merger agreement that the
Group signed with Gelesis on June 12, 2023 (the "Merger Agreement")
and were no longer substantive.
On October 12, 2023, the Group terminated the Merger Agreement
with Gelesis as certain closing conditions were not satisfied. In
October 2023, Gelesis ceased operations and filed a voluntary
petition for relief under the provisions of Chapter 7 of Title 11
of the United States Bankruptcy Code. A Chapter 7 trustee has been
appointed by the Bankruptcy Court who has control over the assets
and liabilities of Gelesis, effectively eliminating the authority
and powers of the Board of Directors of Gelesis and its executive
officers to act on behalf of Gelesis. The assets of Gelesis are in
liquidation and Gelesis no longer has any officers or employees.
The Group ceased accounting for Gelesis as an equity method
investment as it no longer has significant influence in
Gelesis.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the Group recorded
$4,910 as its share in the losses of Gelesis with $3,787 recorded
in the first six months. The Group’s balance in this equity method
investment was $— as of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023.
Sonde
Following deconsolidation of Sonde on May 25 2022, the Group has
significant influence in Sonde through its voting interest in Sonde
and its remaining representation on Sonde's Board of Directors. The
Group holds Preferred A-1, A-2 and B shares. The Preferred A-1
shares, in substance, have the same terms as common stock and as
such, provide their shareholders with access to returns associated
with a residual equity ownership in Sonde. Consequently, the
investment in Preferred A-1 shares is accounted for under the
equity method of accounting. The Preferred A-2 and B shares,
however, do not provide their shareholders with access to returns
associated with a residual equity interest, and as such, are
accounted for under IFRS 9, as investments held at fair value.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recorded a loss of $3,357 and $1,537, respectively, related to
Sonde's equity method of accounting. As of December 31, 2023, the
Sonde equity method investment had a balance of $3,185. The Group's
share of Sonde's loss in the six months ended June 30, 2024 has
reduced the Group's investment in this associate to $0. The excess
loss of $172 was applied against the fair value of Sonde Preferred
A-2 and B shares, which are considered to be long term
interests.
6. Investment in Notes from Associates
Gelesis
On July 27, 2022, the Group, as a lender, entered into an
unsecured promissory note (the "Junior Note") with Gelesis, as a
borrower, in the amount of $15,000. The Junior Note bears an annual
interest rate of 15% per annum. The maturity date of the Junior
Note is the earlier of December 31, 2023 or five business days
following the consummation of a qualified financing by Gelesis.
Based on the terms of the Junior Note, due to the option to convert
to a variable amount of shares at the time of default, the Junior
Note is required to be measured at fair value with changes in fair
value recorded through profit and loss.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the Group entered into
multiple agreements with Gelesis to purchase senior secured
convertible promissory notes (the "Senior Notes") and warrants for
share of Gelesis common stock for a total consideration of $11,850.
The Senior Notes are secured by a first-priority lien on
substantially all assets of Gelesis and the guarantors (other than
the equity interests in, and assets held by Gelesis s.r.l., a
subsidiary of Gelesis, and certain other exceptions). The initial
fair value of the Senior Notes was determined to be $10,729 while
$1,121 was determined to be the initial fair value of the warrants.
The Senior Notes represent debt instruments that are presented at
fair value through profit and loss as the amounts receivable do not
solely represent payments of principal and interest as the Senior
Notes are convertible into Gelesis common stock.
In October 2023, Gelesis ceased operations and filed a voluntary
petition for relief under the provisions of Chapter 7 of Title 11
of the United States Bankruptcy Code. Therefore, the Group
determined that the fair value of the Junior Note and the Senior
Notes with the warrants was $0 as of December 31, 2023. For the six
months ended June 30, 2023 and year ended December 31, 2023, the
Group recorded a loss of $5,945 and $27,230, respectively, for the
changes in the fair value of these instruments which were included
in gain/(loss) on investments in notes from associates in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
In June 2024, the Bankruptcy Court approved an executed
agreement for a third party to acquire the remaining net assets of
Gelesis for $15,000. As the only senior secured creditor, the Group
is expected to receive a majority of the proceeds from this sale
after deduction of Bankruptcy Court related legal and
administrative costs. As of June 30, 2024, these notes were
determined to have a fair value of $11,312. The Group recorded a
gain of $11,312 for the changes in the fair value of these notes
which were included in gain/(loss) on investments in notes from
associates in the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
Vedanta
On April 24, 2023, Vedanta closed the second tranche of its
convertible debt for additional proceeds of $18,000, of which
$5,000 were invested by the Group. The convertible debt carries an
interest rate of 9 percent per annum. The debt has various
conversion triggers and the conversion price is established at the
lower of 80% of the equity price of the last financing round, or a
certain pre-money valuation cap established in the agreement. If
the convertible debt is not earlier converted or repaid, the entire
outstanding amount of the convertible debt shall be due and payable
upon the earliest to occur of (a) the later of (x) November 1, 2025
and (y) the date which is sixty (60) days after all amounts owed
under, or in connection with, the loan Vedanta received from a
certain investor have been paid in full, or (b) the consummation of
a Deemed Liquidation Event (as defined in Vedanta’s Amended and
Restated Certificate of Incorporation).
Due to the terms of the convertible debt, the investment in such
convertible debt is measured at fair value with changes in the fair
value recorded through profit and loss. During the six months ended
June 30, 2024 and June 30, 2023, the Group recorded a gain of $300
and a loss of $100, respectively, for the changes in the fair value
of the Vedanta convertible debt, which were included in gain/(loss)
on investments in notes from associates in the Condensed
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income/(Loss).
Following is the activity in respect of investments in notes
from associates during the period. The fair value of the $16,212
notes from associates as of June 30, 2024 is determined using
unobservable Level 3 inputs. See Note 13. Financial Instruments for
additional information.
Investment in notes from associates
$
Balance as of December 31, 2023 and
January 1, 2024
4,600
Changes in the fair value of the notes
11,612
Balance as of June 30, 2024
16,212
7. Share-based Payments
Share-based payments includes stock options and restricted stock
units (“RSUs”). Expense for stock options and time-based RSUs is
recognized based on the grant date fair value of these awards.
Performance-based RSUs to executives are treated as liability
awards and the related expense is recognized based on reporting
date fair value up until settlement date.
Share-based Payment Expense
The Group's share-based payment expense for the six months ended
June 30, 2024 and 2023 was $4,648 and $1,256, respectively. The
following table provides the classification of the Group’s
consolidated share-based payment expense as reflected in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss):
Six months ended June 30,
2024
$
2023
$
General and administrative
4,471
1,121
Research and development
176
135
Total
4,648
1,256
The Performance Share Plan
In June 2015, the Group adopted the Performance Stock Plan (the
“2015 PSP”). Under the 2015 PSP and subsequent amendments, awards
of ordinary shares may be made to the Directors, senior managers
and employees, and other individuals providing services to the
Group up to a maximum authorized amount of 10.0 percent of the
total ordinary shares outstanding.
In June 2023 the Group adopted a new Performance Stock Plan (the
"2023 PSP") that has the same terms as the 2015 PSP but instituted
for all new awards a limit of 10.0 percent of the total ordinary
shares outstanding over a five-year period.
The awards granted under these plans have various vesting terms
over a period of service between one and four years, provided the
recipient remains continuously engaged as a service provider. The
options awards expire 10 years from the grant date.
The share-based awards granted under these plans are generally
equity-settled (see cash settlements below). As of June 30, 2024,
the Group had issued 31,654,895 units of share-based awards under
these plans.
RSUs
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
granted the following RSUs to certain non-executive Directors,
executives and employees:
Six months ended June 30,
2024
2023
Time based RSUs
3,933,606
102,732
Performance based RSUs
1,822,151
3,576,937
Total RSUs
5,755,757
3,679,669
Each RSU entitles the holder to one ordinary share on vesting
and the RSU awards are generally based on a vesting schedule over a
one to three-year requisite service period in which the Group
recognizes compensation expense for the RSUs. Following vesting,
each recipient will be required to make a payment of one pence per
ordinary share on settlement of the RSUs.
Time-based RSUs are equity-settled. The grant date fair value on
such RSUs is recognized over the vesting term.
Performance-based RSUs are granted to executives. Vesting of
such RSUs is subject to the satisfaction of both performance and
market conditions. The performance condition is based on the
achievement of the Group's strategic targets. The market conditions
are based on the achievement of the absolute total shareholder
return (“TSR”), TSR as compared to the FTSE 250 Index, and TSR as
compared to the MSCI Europe Health Care Index. The RSU award
performance criteria have changed over time as the criteria are
continually evaluated by the Group’s Remuneration Committee.
The Group recognizes the estimated fair value of
performance-based awards with non-market conditions as share-based
compensation expense over the performance period based upon its
determination whether it is probable that the performance targets
will be achieved. The Group assesses the probability of achieving
the performance targets at each reporting period. Cumulative
adjustments, if any, are recorded to reflect subsequent changes in
the estimated outcome of performance-related conditions.
The fair value of the performance-based awards with market
conditions is based on the Monte Carlo simulation analysis
utilizing a Geometric Brownian Motion process with 100,000
simulations to value those shares. The model considers share price
volatility, risk-free rate and other covariance of comparable
public companies and other market data to predict distribution of
relative share performance.
The RSUs to executives are treated as liability awards as the
Group has a historical practice of settling these awards in cash,
and as such, adjusted to fair value at every reporting date until
settlement with changes in fair value recorded in earnings as stock
based compensation expense.
In May 2024, the Group settled 237,420 vested RSUs through
issuance of shares to a terminated employee. As such, the liability
at the date of settlement was settled for $646 in shares.
In March 2024, the Group settled 518,721 vested RSUs through
issuance of shares after paying the employees' withholding taxes in
cash. As such, the liability at the date of settlement was settled
for $655 in cash and $655 in shares.
In February and May 2023, the Group settled 276,425 vested RSUs
through issuance of shares, after paying the employees' withholding
taxes in cash. As such, the liability at dates of settlement was
settled for $298 in cash and $424 in shares.
The Group recorded $973 expense and $235 income for the six
months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively, in respect of
all restricted stock units, of which $609 expense and $485 income,
respectively, was in respect of liability settled share-based
awards.
As of June 30, 2024, the carrying amount of the RSU liability
awards was $3,435 with $1,886 current and $1,550 non current. As of
December 31, 2023, the carrying amount of the RSU liability awards
was $4,782 with $1,281 current and $3,501 non current, out of which
$1,281 related to awards that met all their performance and market
conditions and were settled in March and May of 2024 as discussed
above.
Stock Options
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
granted 2,548,375 and 569,125 stock option awards,
respectively.
Stock options are treated as equity-settled awards. The fair
value of the stock options awarded by the Group was estimated at
the grant date using the Black-Scholes option valuation model,
considering the terms and conditions upon which options were
granted, with the following weighted- average assumptions:
For the six months ended June 30,
2024
2023
Expected volatility
44.79%
43.45%
Expected terms (in years)
6.16
6.16
Risk-free interest rate
4.32%
3.66%
Expected dividend yield
—
—
Exercise price (GBP)
1.88
2.29
Underlying stock price (GBP)
1.88
2.29
These assumptions resulted in an estimated weighted-average
grant-date fair value per share of stock options granted during the
six months ended June 30, 2024, and 2023 of $1.19, and $1.38,
respectively.
As of June 30, 2024, 9,191,140 incentive options are exercisable
with a weighted-average exercise price of £2.20. Exercise prices
ranged from £0.01 to £3.60.
The Group incurred share-based payment expense for the stock
options of $390 and $1,215 for the six months ended June 30, 2024
and 2023, respectively.
Subsidiary Plans
The subsidiaries incurred $3,285 and $277 in share-based payment
expense in respect of their share-based award plans for the six
months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, respectively.
The share-based payment expense for the six months ended June
30, 2024 is primarily related to the Seaport Plan discussed
below.
In 2024, the Board of Directors of Seaport approved the 2024
Equity Incentive Plan (the “Seaport Plan”). The options granted
under the Seaport Plan are equity settled and expire 10 years from
the grant date. Typically, the awards vest in four years but
vesting conditions can vary based on the discretion of Seaport’s
Board of Directors.
The estimated grant date fair value of the equity awards is
recognized as an expense over the awards’ vesting periods.
In the six months ended June 30, 2024, Seaport granted 3,450,000
shares of restricted stock to certain officers and directors, of
which 1,227,778 shares are fully vested as of June 30, 2024.
Seaport also granted 14,859,335 stock options awards to its
non-executive Directors, executives and employees. The fair value
of the restricted stock is estimated at the date of grant using the
market backsolve and two-scenario option pricing model. See Note
13. Financial Instruments. The fair value of the stock option
grants was estimated at the date of grant using the Black-Scholes
option pricing model with the following weighted-average
assumptions:
For the six months ended June 30,
2024
Expected volatility
80.00%
Expected terms (in years)
5.75
Risk-free interest rate
4.34%
Expected dividend yield
—
Exercise price
$0.97
Underlying stock price
$0.97
These assumptions resulted in an estimated weighted-average
grant-date fair value of $0.68 per share for stock options granted
during the six months ended June 30, 2024.
8. Finance Income/(Costs), net
The following table shows the breakdown of finance income and
costs:
2024
$
2023
$
For the six months ended June 30,
Finance income
Interest income from financial assets
11,732
7,731
Total finance income
11,732
7,731
Finance costs
Contractual interest expense on notes
payable
(328)
(82)
Interest expense on other borrowings
—
(363)
Interest expense on lease liability
(675)
(817)
Gain/(loss) on foreign currency
exchange
(33)
(76)
Total finance cost –
contractual
(1,036)
(1,338)
Gain/(loss) from change in fair value of
warrant liability
—
33
Gain/(loss) from change in fair value of
preferred shares
(1,613)
2,617
Total finance income/(costs) – fair
value accounting
(1,613)
2,650
Total finance costs - non cash interest
expense related to sale of future royalties
(10,551)
(3,726)
Finance income/(costs), net
(1,468)
5,316
9.Earnings/(Loss) per Share
Basic earnings/(loss) per share is computed by dividing the
Group's income or loss for the period attributable to ordinary
shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares
outstanding, net of treasury shares.
Dilutive earnings/loss per share is computed by dividing the
Group's income or loss for the period attributable to ordinary
shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares
outstanding, net of treasury shares, plus the weighted average
number of ordinary shares that would be issued at conversion of all
the dilutive potential securities into ordinary shares. Dilutive
effects arise from equity-settled shares from the Group's
share-based plans.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
incurred a net loss, and therefore, all outstanding potential
securities were considered anti-dilutive. The amount of potential
securities that were excluded from the diluted calculation amounted
to 1,637,694 and 1,878,514 shares for the six months ended June 30,
2024 and 2023, respectively.
The following table sets forth the computation of basic and
diluted earnings/(loss) per share for the periods presented:
For the six months ended June 30,
2024
2023
Numerator:
Income/(loss) attributable to the owners
of the Group
($41,773)
($25,004)
Denominator:
Issued ordinary shares at January 1
271,853,731
278,566,306
Effect of shares issued & treasury
shares purchased and cancelled
(2,197,209)
(311,925)
Weighted average ordinary shares for basic
EPS
269,656,522
278,254,381
Effect of dilutive securities
—
—
Weighted average ordinary shares for
diluted EPS
269,656,522
278,254,381
Basic earnings/(loss) per ordinary
share
($0.15)
($0.09)
Diluted earnings/(loss) per ordinary
share
($0.15)
($0.09)
10. Equity
On May 9, 2022, the Group announced the commencement of a
$50,000 share repurchase program (the "Program") of its ordinary
shares of one pence each. The Group executed the Program in two
equal tranches. It entered into an irrevocable non-discretionary
instruction with Jefferies International Limited (“Jefferies”) in
relation to the purchase by Jefferies of the ordinary shares for an
aggregate consideration (excluding expenses) of no greater than
$25,000 for each tranche and the simultaneous on-sale of such
ordinary shares by Jefferies to the Group, subject to certain
volume and price restrictions. In February 2024, the Group
completed the Program and has repurchased an aggregate of
20,182,863 ordinary shares under the Program. These shares have
been held as treasury shares and are being used to settle the
vesting of restricted stock units or exercise of stock options.
In March 2024, the Group announced a proposed capital return of
$100,000 to its shareholders by way of a tender offer (the "Tender
Offer"). The proposed Tender Offer was approved by shareholders at
the Annual General Meeting of Stockholders held on June 6, 2024, to
acquire a maximum number of 33,500,000 ordinary shares (including
ordinary shares represented by American Depository Shares
(''ADSs'')) for a fixed price of 250 pence per ordinary share
(equivalent to £25.00 per ADS) for a maximum aggregate amount of
$100,000 excluding expenses.
The Tender Offer was completed on June 24, 2024. The Group
repurchased 31,540,670 ordinary shares under the Tender Offer.
Following such repurchase, the Group cancelled these shares
repurchased. As a result of the cancellation, the nominal value of
$600 related to the cancelled shares was reduced from share capital
and transferred to a capital redemption reserve, increasing the
capital redemption reserve balance to $600 as of June 30, 2024
which was included in other reserve in the Condensed Consolidated
Statement of Changes in Equity.
As of December 31, 2023, the Group had 271,853,731 common shares
outstanding, including 289,468,159 issued shares net of 17,614,428
shares repurchased and held by the Group in Treasury. As of June
30, 2024, the Group had 239,421,312 common shares outstanding,
including 257,927,489 issued shares after deducting 31,540,670
cancelled ordinary shares repurchased through the Tender Offer, net
of 18,506,177 shares repurchased and held by the Group in
Treasury.
11. Subsidiary Preferred Shares
In April 2024, Seaport closed a Series A-2 preferred share
financing with aggregate proceeds of $100,100 of which $68,100 was
from outside investors and $32,000 was from the Group. As of June
30, 2024, the Group held equity ownership in Seaport of 57.7
percent on a diluted basis.
Preferred shares issued by subsidiaries often contain redemption
and conversion features that are assessed under IFRS 9 in
conjunction with the host preferred share instrument. This balance
represents subsidiary preferred shares issued to third parties.
The subsidiary preferred shares are redeemable upon the
occurrence of a contingent event, other than full liquidation of
the subsidiaries, that is not considered to be within the control
of the subsidiaries. Therefore, these subsidiary preferred shares
are classified as liabilities. These liabilities are measured at
fair value through profit and loss. The preferred shares are
convertible into ordinary shares of the subsidiaries at the option
of the holders and are mandatorily convertible into ordinary shares
under certain circumstances. Under certain scenarios, the number of
ordinary shares receivable on conversion will change and therefore,
the number of shares that will be issued is not fixed. As such, the
conversion feature is considered to be an embedded derivative that
normally would require bifurcation. However, since the preferred
share liabilities are measured at fair value through profit and
loss, as mentioned above, no bifurcation is required.
The preferred shares are entitled to vote with holders of common
shares on an as converted basis.
The fair value of all subsidiary preferred shares as of June 30,
2024 and December 31, 2023, is as follows:
2024
$
2023
$
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31,
2023
Entrega
169
169
Seaport
69,713
—
Total subsidiary preferred share
balance
69,882
169
As is customary, in the event of any voluntary or involuntary
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of a subsidiary, the holders
of outstanding subsidiary preferred shares shall be entitled to be
paid out of the assets of the subsidiary available for distribution
to shareholders and before any payment shall be made to holders of
ordinary shares. A merger, acquisition, sale of voting control or
other transaction of a subsidiary in which the shareholders of the
subsidiary immediately before the transaction do not own a majority
of the outstanding shares of the surviving company shall be deemed
to be a liquidation event. Additionally, a sale, lease, transfer or
other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the
subsidiary shall also be deemed a liquidation event.
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the minimum
liquidation preference reflecting the amounts that would be payable
to the subsidiary preferred holders upon a liquidation event of the
subsidiaries, is as follows:
2024
$
2023
$
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31,
2023
Entrega
2,216
2,216
Follica
6,405
6,405
Seaport
68,100
—
Total minimum liquidation
preference
76,721
8,621
For the six months ended June 30, 2024, the Group recognized the
following changes in the value of subsidiary preferred shares:
Subsidiary
Preferred Shares
$
Balance as of December 31 2023
169
Issuance of new preferred shares
68,100
Increase/(decrease) in value of preferred
shares measured at fair value*
1,613
Balance as of June 30
69,882
*The changes in fair value of preferred shares are included in
total finance income/(costs) – fair value accounting in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
12. Sale of Future Royalties Liability
On March 4, 2011, the Group entered into a license agreement
with Karuna Therapeutics, Inc. (“Karuna”) according to which the
Group granted Karuna an exclusive license to research, develop and
sell KarXT in exchange for a royalty on annual net sales,
development and regulatory milestones and a fixed portion of
sublicensing income, if any (hereinafter “License Agreement”).
On March 22, 2023, the Group signed an agreement with Royalty
Pharma (the "Royalty Purchase Agreement"), according to which the
Group sold Royalty Pharma a partial right to receive royalty
payments made by Karuna in respect of net sales of KarXT, if and
when received. According to the Royalty Purchase Agreement, all
royalties due to the Group under the License Agreement will be paid
to Royalty Pharma up until an annual sales threshold of $60,000,
while all royalties above such annual threshold in a given year
will be split 33% to Royalty Pharma and 67% to the Group. Under the
terms of the Royalty Purchase Agreement, the Group received a
non-refundable initial payment of $100,000 at the execution of the
Royalty Purchase Agreement and is eligible to receive additional
payments in the aggregate of up to an additional $400,000 based on
the achievement of certain regulatory and commercial
milestones.
The Group continues to hold the rights under the License
Agreement and has a contractual obligation to deliver cash to
Royalty Pharma for a portion of the royalties it receives.
Therefore, the Group will continue to account for any royalties and
regulatory milestones due to the Group under the License Agreement
as revenue and record the proceeds from the Royalty Purchase
Agreement as a financial liability on its financial statements. In
determining the appropriate accounting treatment for the Royalty
Purchase Agreement, management applied significant judgement.
The acquisition of Karuna by Bristol Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY),
which closed on March 18, 2024, had no impact on the Group's rights
or obligations under the License Agreement or Royalty Purchase
Agreement, each of which remains in full force and effect.
In order to determine the amortized cost of the sale of future
royalties liability, management is required to estimate the total
amount of future receipts from and payments to Royalty Pharma under
the Royalty Purchase Agreement over the life of the agreement. The
$100,000 liability, recorded at execution of the Royalty Purchase
Agreement, is accreted to the total of these receipts and payments
as interest expense over the life of the Royalty Purchase
Agreement. These estimates contain assumptions that impact both the
amortized cost of the liability and the interest expense that are
recognized in each reporting period.
Additional proceeds received from Royalty Pharma will increase
the Group’s financial liability. As royalty payments are made to
Royalty Pharma, the balance of the liability will be effectively
repaid over the life of the Royalty Purchase Agreement. To date,
the Group has not made any royalty payments to Royalty Pharma. The
estimated timing and amount of royalty payments to and proceeds
from Royalty Pharma are likely to change over the life of the
Royalty Purchase Agreement. A significant increase or decrease in
estimated royalty payments, or a significant shift in the timing of
cash flows, will materially impact the sale of future royalties
liability, interest expense and the time period for repayment. The
Group periodically assesses the expected payments to, or proceeds
from, Royalty Pharma. Any such changes in amount or timing of cash
flows requires the Group to re-calculate the amortized cost of the
sale of future royalties liability as the present value of the
estimated future cash flows from the Royalty Purchase Agreement
that are discounted at the liability’s original effective interest
rate. The adjustment is recognized immediately in profit or loss as
income or expense.
The following shows the activity in respect of the sale of
future royalties liability:
Sale of future
royalties liability
$
Balance as of December 31, 2023
110,159
Non cash interest expense recognized
10,551
Balance as of June 30, 2024
120,710
Less sale of future royalties liability,
current
-3,252
Sale of future royalties liability,
non-current
117,458
13. Financial Instruments
The Group’s financial instruments consist of financial assets in
the form of notes, convertible notes and investment in shares, and
financial liabilities, including preferred shares. Many of these
financial instruments are presented at fair value, with changes in
fair value recorded through profit and loss.
Fair Value Process
For financial instruments measured at fair value under IFRS 9,
the change in the fair value is reflected through profit and loss.
Using the guidance in IFRS 13, the total business enterprise value
and allocable equity of each entity being valued can be determined
using a market backsolve approach through a recent arm’s length
financing round (or a future probable arm's length transaction),
market/asset probability-weighted expected return method ("PWERM")
approach, discounted cash flow approach, or hybrid approaches. The
approaches, in order of strongest fair value evidence, are detailed
as follows:
Valuation Method
Description
Market – Backsolve
The market backsolve approach benchmarks
the original issue price (OIP) of the company’s latest funding
transaction as current value.
Market/Asset – PWERM
Under a PWERM, the company value is based
upon the probability-weighted present value of expected future
investment returns, considering each of the possible future
outcomes available to the enterprise. Possible future outcomes can
include IPO scenarios, potential SPAC transactions, merger and
acquisition transactions as well as other similar exit transactions
of the investee.
Income Based – DCF
The income approach is used to estimate
fair value based on the income streams, such as cash flows or
earnings, that an asset or business can be expected to
generate.
At each measurement date, investments held at fair value (that
are not publicly traded) as well as the fair value of preferred
share liabilities, including embedded conversion rights that are
not bifurcated, were determined using the following allocation
methods: option pricing model (“OPM”), PWERM, or hybrid allocation
framework. The methods are detailed as follows:
Allocation Method
Description
OPM
The OPM model treats preferred stock as
call options on the enterprise’s equity value, with exercise prices
based on the liquidation preferences of the preferred stock.
PWERM
Under a PWERM, share value is based upon
the probability-weighted present value of expected future
investment returns, considering each of the possible future
outcomes available to the enterprise, as well as the rights of each
share class.
Hybrid
The hybrid method is a combination of the
PWERM and OPM. Under the hybrid method, multiple liquidity
scenarios are weighted based on the probability of the scenario's
occurrence, similar to the PWERM, while also utilizing the OPM to
estimate the allocation of value in one or more of the
scenarios.
Valuation policies and procedures are regularly monitored by the
Group. Fair value measurements, including those categorized within
Level 3, are prepared and reviewed for reasonableness and
compliance with the fair value measurements guidance under IFRS
accounting standards. The Group measures fair value using the
following fair value hierarchy that reflects the significance of
the inputs used in making the measurements:
Fair Value
Hierarchy Level
Description
Level 1
Inputs that are quoted market prices
(unadjusted) in active markets for identical instruments.
Level 2
Inputs other than quoted prices included
within Level 1 that are observable either directly (i.e. as prices)
or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices).
Level 3
Inputs that are unobservable. This
category includes all instruments for which the valuation technique
includes inputs not based on observable data and the unobservable
inputs have a significant effect on the instruments' valuation.
Whilst the Group considers the methodologies and assumptions
adopted in fair value measurements as supportable and reasonable,
because of the inherent uncertainty of valuation, those estimated
values may differ significantly from the values that would have
been used had a ready market for the investment existed.
Subsidiary Preferred Shares Liability
The following table summarizes the changes in the Group’s
subsidiary preferred shares measured at fair value, which are
categorized as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy:
Subsidiary
Preferred Shares
$
Balance at December 31, 2023 and January
1, 2024
169
Value at issuance
68,100
Change in fair value
1,613
Balance at June 30, 2024
69,882
The change in fair value of preferred shares liabilities are
recorded in finance income/(costs) – fair value accounting in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
The significant unobservable inputs used at June 30, 2024 in the
fair value measurement of the Group’s material subsidiary preferred
shares liability and the sensitivity of the fair value measurement
for this liability to changes of these significant unobservable
inputs are summarized in the table below.
As of June 30, 2024
Subsidiary Preferred Share
Liability Measured through
Market Backsolve &
Two-Scenario OPM
Unobservable Inputs
Input Value
Sensitivity Range
Fair Value
Increase/(Decrease) $
Equity Value
192,200
-5%
(2,251)
+5%
2,137
Time to Liquidity
1.27
-6 Months
3,511
+ 6 Months
(2,924)
Volatility
56%
-10%
1,664
+10%
(1,714)
Investments Held at Fair Value
Vor and Akili Valuation
Vor (Nasdaq: VOR), Akili (Nasdaq: AKLI) and additional
immaterial investments are listed entities on an active exchange,
and as such, the fair value as of June 30, 2024, was calculated
utilizing the quoted common share price which is categorized as
Level 1 in the fair value hierarchy.
Vedanta and Sonde
As of June 30, 2024, the Group accounts for the following
investments under IFRS 9 as investments held at fair value with
changes in fair value through the profit and loss: Sonde preferred
A-2 and B shares and Vedanta convertible preferred shares. The
valuation of the aforementioned investments is categorized as Level
3 in the fair value hierarchy due to the use of significant
unobservable inputs to value such assets. During the six months
ended June 30, 2024, the Group recorded such investments at fair
value and recognized a loss of $3,486 for the change in fair value
of the investments.
The following table summarizes the changes in all the Group’s
investments held at fair value categorized as Level 3 in the fair
value hierarchy:
$
Balance at December 31, 2023
24,872
Gain/(loss) on changes in fair value
(3,796)
Balance as of June 30, 2024 before
allocation of equity method loss to LTI
21,076
Equity method loss recorded against
LTI
(172)
Balance as of June 30, 2024 after
allocation of equity method loss to LTI
20,904
The change in fair value of investments held at fair value is
recorded in gain/(loss) on investments held at fair value in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
As of June 30, 2024, the Group’s material investments held at
fair value categorized as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy
include the preferred shares of Sonde and Vedanta, with fair value
of $10,571 and $10,505, respectively. The significant unobservable
inputs used at June 30, 2024 in the fair value measurement of these
investments and the sensitivity of the fair value measurements for
these investments to changes of these significant unobservable
inputs are summarized in the table below.
As of June 30, 2024
Investment Measured through
Market Backsolve & OPM
Unobservable Inputs (Sonde)
Input Value
Sensitivity Range
Fair Value
Increase/(Decrease) $
Equity Value
54,307
-5%
(466)
+5%
466
Time to Liquidity
2.00
-6 Months
34
+ 6 Months
(37)
Volatility
55%
-10%
1
+10%
(25)
As of June 30, 2024
Investment Measured through
Market Backsolve that Leverages a Monte Carlo Simulation
Unobservable Inputs (Vedanta)
Input Value
Sensitivity Range
Fair Value
Increase/(Decrease) $
Equity Value
30,272
-5%
(1,029)
+5%
913
Time to Liquidity
0.73
- 6 Months
(9,690)
+ 6 Months
3,328
Volatility
125%
-10%
(1,111)
+10%
823
Investments in Notes from Associates
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the investment in
notes from associates was $16,212 and $4,600, respectively. The
balance represents the fair value of convertible promissory notes
with a principal value of $26,850 issued by Gelesis and convertible
debt with a principal value of $5,000 issued by Vedanta.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024, the Group recorded a
gain of $11,612 for the change in fair value of the notes from
associates in the gain/(loss) on investments in notes from
associates within the Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income/Loss. The gain was driven by an increase of
$11,312 in the fair value of the Gelesis convertible promissory
notes and an increase of $300 in the fair value of the Vedanta
convertible note.
In October 2023, Gelesis ceased operations and filed a voluntary
petition for relief under the provisions of Chapter 7 of Title 11
of the United States Bankruptcy Code. Therefore, the Group
determined the fair value of the convertible promissory notes
issued by Gelesis to be $0 at December 31, 2023. In June 2024, the
Bankruptcy Court approved an executed agreement for a third party
to acquire the remaining net assets of Gelesis for $15,000. As the
only senior secured creditor, the Group is expected to receive a
majority of the proceeds from this sale after deduction of legal
and administrative costs incurred by the Bankruptcy Court. As of
June 30, 2024, these notes were determined to have a fair value of
$11,312.
The convertible debt issued by Vedanta was valued using a market
backsolve approach that leverages a Monte Carlo simulation. The
significant unobservable inputs categorized as Level 3 in the fair
value hierarchy used at June 30, 2024, in the fair value
measurement of the convertible debt are the same as the inputs
disclosed above for Vedanta preferred shares.
Fair Value Measurement and Classification
The fair value of financial instruments by category as of June
30, 2024 and December 31, 2023:
2024
Carrying Amount
Fair Value
Financial Assets
$
Financial
Liabilities
$
Level 1
$
Level 2
$
Level 3
$
Total
$
Financial assets3:
Money Markets1,2
224,361
—
224,361
—
—
224,361
Investment in notes from associates
16,212
—
—
—
16,212
16,212
Investments held at fair value
29,202
—
8,126
—
21,076
29,202
Total financial assets
269,775
—
232,487
—
37,288
269,775
Financial liabilities:
Subsidiary preferred shares
—
69,882
—
—
69,882
69,882
Share-based liability awards
—
3,435
—
—
3,435
3,435
Total financial liabilities
—
73,317
—
—
73,317
73,317
- Issued by a diverse group of corporations, largely consisting
of financial institutions, virtually all of which are investment
grade.
- Included within cash and cash equivalents.
- Excluded from the table above are short-term investments of
$191,938 that are classified at amortized cost as of June 30, 2024.
The cost of these short-term investments approximates current fair
value.
The Group has a number of financial instruments that are not
measured at fair value in the Condensed Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position. For these instruments the fair values are not
materially different from their carrying amounts.
2023
Carrying Amount
Fair Value
Financial Assets
$
Financial Liabilities
$
Level 1
$
Level 2
$
Level 3
$
Total
$
Financial assets3:
Money Markets1,2
156,705
—
156,705
—
—
156,705
Note from associate
4,600
—
—
—
4,600
4,600
Investments held at fair value
317,841
—
292,970
—
24,872
317,841
Total financial assets
479,146
—
449,675
—
29,472
479,146
Financial liabilities:
Subsidiary preferred shares
—
169
—
—
169
169
Share-based liability awards
—
4,782
—
—
4,782
4,782
Total financial liabilities
—
4,951
—
—
4,951
4,951
- Issued by a diverse group of corporations, largely consisting
of financial institutions, virtually all of which are investment
grade.
- Included within cash and cash equivalents.
- Excluded from the table above are short-term investments of
$136,062 that are classified at amortized cost as of December 31,
2023. The cost of these short-term investments approximates current
fair value.
14. Non-Controlling Interest
As of June 30, 2024, non-controlling interests include Entrega,
Follica, and Seaport. Ownership interests of the non-controlling
interests in these entities as of June 30, 2024 were 11.7 percent,
19.9 percent and 56.4 percent, respectively. As of December 31,
2023, non-controlling interests include Entrega, and Follica.
Ownership interests of the non-controlling interests in these
entities were 11.7 percent, and 19.9 percent, respectively.
Non-controlling interests include the amounts recorded for
subsidiary stock awards.
For the six-months ended June 30, 2024, Seaport issued 950,000
shares of fully vested common stock to the Group and 3,450,000
shares of common stock to certain officers and directors, of which
1,227,778 shares are fully vested as of June 30, 2024. Therefore,
the non-controlling interest ownership percentage is 56.4 percent
as of June 30, 2024.
The following table summarizes the changes in the
non-controlling ownership interest in subsidiaries.
Non-Controlling
Interest
$
Balance at December 31, 2023 and January
1, 2024
(5,835)
Share of comprehensive income (loss)
(7,111)
Equity settled share-based payments
3,285
Expiration of share options in
subsidiary
(1)
Balance at June 30, 2024
(9,661)
The following table summarizes the financial information related
to Seaport, the Group's only subsidiary with significant
non-controlling interest as of June 30, 2024.
For the period ended June 30, 2024
Non-Controlling Interest
$
Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss)
Total revenue
—
Income/(loss) for the period
(12,332)
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for the
period
(12,332)
Statement of Financial Position
Total assets
102,494
Total liabilities
79,070
Net assets/(liabilities)
23,424
15. Trade and Other Payables
Information regarding Trade and other payables was as
follows:
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31,
2023
2024
$
2023
$
Trade payables
8,125
14,637
Accrued expenses
21,434
28,187
Liability for share-based awards
1,886
1,281
Other
1
3
Total trade and other payables
31,445
44,107
16. Commitments and Contingencies
The Group is a party to certain licensing agreements where the
Group is licensing IP from third parties. In consideration for such
licenses, the Group has made upfront payments and may be required
to make additional contingent payments based on developmental and
sales milestones and/or royalty on future sales. As of June 30,
2024, certain milestone events have not yet occurred, and
therefore, the Group does not have a present obligation to make the
related payments in respect of the licenses. Such milestones are
dependent on events that are outside of the control of the Group,
and many of these milestone events are remote of occurring.
Payments in respect of developmental milestones that are dependent
on events that are outside the control of the Group but are
reasonably possible to occur amounted to approximately $7,371 and
$7,371, respectively, as of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023.
These milestone amounts represent an aggregate of multiple
milestone payments depending on different milestone events in
multiple agreements. The probability that all such milestone events
will occur in the aggregate is remote. Payments made to license IP
represent the acquisition cost of intangible assets.
The Group was a party to certain sponsored research arrangements
and is a party to arrangements with contract manufacturing and
contract research organizations, whereby the counterparty provides
the Group with research and/or manufacturing services. As of June
30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the noncancellable commitments in
respect of such contracts amounted to approximately $16,827 and
$16,422, respectively.
In March 2024, a complaint was filed in Massachusetts District
Court against the Group alleging breach of contract with respect to
certain payments alleged to be owed to a previous employee of a
Group's subsidiary based on purported terms of a contract between
such individual and the Group. The Group intends to defend itself
vigorously though the ultimate outcome of this matter and the
timing for resolution remains uncertain. No determination has been
made that a loss, if any, arising from this matter is probable or
that the amount of any such loss, or range of loss, is reasonably
estimable.
The Group is involved from time-to-time in various legal
proceedings arising in the normal course of business. Although the
outcomes of these legal proceedings are inherently difficult to
predict, the Group does not expect the resolution of such legal
proceedings to have a material adverse effect on its financial
position or results of operations. The Group did not book any
provisions and did not identify any contingent liabilities
requiring disclosure for any legal proceedings other than already
included above for the six months ended June 30, 2024.
17. Related Parties Transactions
Related Party Subleases
During 2019, the Group executed a sublease agreement with a
related party, Gelesis. During 2023, the sublease receivable was
written down to $0 as Gelesis ceased operations and filed for
bankruptcy.
The Group recorded $0, and $16 of interest income with respect
to the sublease during the six months ended June 30, 2024, and
2023, respectively, which is presented within finance income in the
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income/(Loss).
Key Management Personnel Compensation
Key management includes executive directors and members of the
executive management team of the Group (not including non-executive
directors). The key management personnel compensation of the Group
was as follows for the six months ended June 30:
2024
$
2023
$
For the six months ended June 30
Short-term employee benefits
1,872
2,230
Post-employment benefits
44
38
Termination Benefits
140
187
Share-based payment expense
314
(518)
Total
2,370
1,937
Short-term employee benefits include salaries, health care and
other non-cash benefits. Post-employment benefits include 401K
contributions from the Group. Termination benefits include
severance pay. Share-based payments are generally subject to
vesting terms over future periods. See Note 7. Share-based
Payments. As of June 30, 2024, the payable due to the key
management employees was $909.
In addition the Group paid remuneration to non-executive
directors in the amounts of $245, and $213 for the six months ended
June 30, 2024, and 2023, respectively. Also, the Group incurred
$147, and $216, of stock based compensation expense for such
non-executive directors for the six months ended June 30, 2024, and
2023, respectively.
During the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
incurred $5, and $0, respectively, of expenses paid to related
parties.
Convertible Notes Issued to Directors
Certain related parties of the Group have invested in
convertible notes issued by the Group’s subsidiaries. As of June
30, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the outstanding related party notes
payable totaled $107 and $104, respectively, including principal
and interest. The notes issued to related parties bear interest
rates, maturity dates, discounts and other contractual terms that
are the same as those issued to outside investors during the same
issuances.
Directors’ and Senior Managers’ Shareholdings and Share
Incentive Awards
The Directors and senior managers hold beneficial interests in
shares in the following businesses and sourcing companies as of
June 30, 2024:
Business name (share class)
Number of shares
held as of June 30,
2024
Number of options
held as of June 30,
2024
Number of RSUs
held as of June 30,
2024
Ownership
interest¹
Directors:
Dr Robert Langer
Entrega (Common)
250,000
82,500
—
4.09%
Dr Raju Kucherlapati
Enlight (Class B Common)
—
30,000
—
3.00%
Dr John LaMattina2
Vedanta Biosciences (Common)
25,000
15,000
—
0.25%
Akili (Common)
56,554
—
—
0.07%
Senior Managers:
Dr Eric Elenko
Seaport Therapeutics
950,000
—
—
1.11%
- Ownership interests as of June 30, 2024 are calculated on a
diluted basis, including issued and outstanding shares, warrants
and options (and written commitments to issue options) but
excluding unallocated shares authorized to be issued pursuant to
equity incentive plans and any shares issuable upon conversion of
outstanding convertible promissory notes.
- Dr John LaMattina holds convertible notes issued by Appeering
in the aggregate principal amount of $50,000. Share holdings in
Akili were sold in July 2024 as a result of the acquisition of
Akili by Virtual Therapeutics.
Directors and senior managers hold 10,295,371 ordinary shares
and 4.3 percent voting rights of the Group as of June 30, 2024.
This amount excludes options to purchase 1,996,875 ordinary shares.
This amount also excludes 4,287,561 shares, which are issuable
based on the terms of performance based RSU awards granted to
certain senior managers covering the financial years 2024, 2023 and
2022, and 355,212 shares, which are issuable to directors
immediately prior to the Group's 2025 Annual General Meeting of
Stockholders, based on the terms of the RSU awards granted to
non-executive directors in 2024. Such shares will be issued to such
senior managers and non-executive directors in future periods
provided that performance and/or service conditions are met, and
certain of the shares will be withheld for payment of customary
withholding taxes.
Other
See Note 6. Investment in Notes from Associates for details on
the notes issued by Gelesis and Vedanta to the Group.
As of June 30, 2024, the Group has a receivable from Sonde and
Vedanta in the amount of $930.
See Note 5. Investments in Associates for details on the
execution and termination of the Merger Agreement with Gelesis.
18. Taxation
Income tax benefit/(expense) is recorded based on management’s
estimate of the annual effective income tax rate which is
determined for each jurisdiction and applied to the interim period
pre-tax income/(loss) of each jurisdiction, respectively. Income
tax benefit/(expense) related to discrete events or transactions
are recorded in the interim period in which the event or
transaction occurs.
For the six months ended June 30, 2024 and 2023, the Group
recorded an income tax benefit of $6,147 and an income tax expense
of $11,807, respectively, which represented an effective tax rate
of 11.2 percent and negative 85.9 percent, respectively. The income
tax benefit recorded for the six months ended June 30, 2024,
primarily related to recognizing an income tax benefit from
generated tax credits, a discrete income tax benefit related to the
capital loss from the Akili investment, partially offset by a
discrete income tax expense related to the mark-to-market
investment adjustments.
19. Subsequent Events
The Group has evaluated subsequent events after June 30, 2024,
up to the date of issuance, August 28, 2024, of the Condensed
Consolidated Financial Statements, and has not identified any
recordable or disclosable events not otherwise reported in these
Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements or notes thereto.
Directors’ responsibility statement
The Board of Directors approved this Half-yearly Financial
Report on August 28, 2024.
The Directors confirm that to the best of their knowledge the
unaudited condensed financial information has been prepared in
accordance with IAS 34 as contained in UK-adopted International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and that the interim
management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8.
Approved by the Board of Directors and signed on its behalf
by:
Bharatt Chowrira Chief Executive Officer August 28,
2024
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PureTech Public Relations
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UK/EU Media Ben Atwell, Rob Winder +44 (0) 20 3727 1000
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nichole@tenbridgecommunications.com
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