Scientific advances and new business models are spurring investor confidence in biomedical-related ventures

Scientific advances and new business models are spurring investor confidence in biomedical-related ventures

Venture capital investment in U.S. life sciences companies soared 29 percent in 2014 from the year before, reaching $8.6 billion, the highest level since 2007. And there is reason to think 2015 will also be a big year for a sector having its third boom of the last two decades.

Biotech is the second biggest category for venture investment after software. VCs are gaining confidence in life sciences companies (which include those developing new drugs and therapies as well as those that make medical devices and equipment) partly because their underlying research has advanced significantly, says Greg Vlahos, life sciences partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, which published the new numbers. A big spike in IPOs by biotech companies over the past two years has also made the field more enticing.+

Distinguishing 2014 from the booms in 2000 and 2007, says Vlahos, was the record number of “megadeals” of over $100 million. The $446 million investment round in Moderna Therapeutics, which is developing a novel class of drugs based on messenger RNA (see “Messenger RNA Could Create a New Class of Drugs”), was the largest Vlahos’s group has ever seen for a life sciences company.

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