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The medtech IPO window is finally open. Or is it?
The medtech IPO window is finally open. Or is it?

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

The medtech IPO window is finally open. Or is it?

This story was originally published on MedTech Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily MedTech Dive newsletter. Editor's note: This is the first story in a two-part series on the medtech IPO landscape. The second story, a Q&A with Beta Bionics executives, will be published next week When Ceribell went public in October, the window for medtech initial public offerings was open just a crack — if not shut completely. Ceribell, which develops technology to diagnose patients with neurological disorders, led a rush of public offerings activity in just a few months, breaking a three-year drought in IPOs. The new public offerings prompted questions about whether the medical device industry could have another IPO moment after a 2021 spike. 'At that time, we debated potentially being the first med device IPO in a few years,' Ceribell CFO Scott Blumberg said in an emailed statement. 'Initially we, and I think a number of peers, saw greater appeal in letting another company take the risk of being first. In recent history, the fast followers had received premium valuations for being the first company to go public in a window.' Aaron DeGagne, a senior healthcare analyst with PitchBook, said the medtech industry's IPO decline followed the later stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, which had zero interest rates and more favorable market dynamics, and was pre-inflation. There were 51 IPOs in 2021, up from 24 the prior year, according to data from PitchBook, which includes private equity and venture capital offerings. 'But since then, it's been pretty tough,' DeGagne said. He highlighted Tempus AI as one of the few companies to go public during those years. The number of IPOs each year from 2020 to Q1 2025 This embedded content is not available in your region. There has been a small burst of IPOs in the few months since Ceribell went public late last year, when the company raised more than $207 million. Anteris Technologies, a heart valve developer, raised nearly $89 million when the company went public in December. Diabetes tech firm Beta Bionics followed in January, raising about $212 million, and Kestra Medical also raised $202 million when it went public in March. The latest activity could be a signal that the IPO drought ends this year, as more companies may be ready to test the market. 'Because the gap in IPO activity was so prolonged — just over three years — the quality of most mature medical device companies is extremely high,' Blumberg said. 'There are multiple medical device companies with profiles that should make them excellent IPO candidates, potentially even in a turbulent market.' John Babitt, a partner with EY, said that 'if the window is open in the second half of '25 … we'll see a decent amount of medtech IPOs.' While companies carefully select the right moment for an IPO, the recent public offerings could also inspire others to follow. Furthermore, Babitt said there was a long list of $100 million funding rounds in the first quarter of 2025 — a level he has not seen in his more than 25 years covering the industry — which is another indicator that companies may be ready. However, a volatile economy, beginning shortly after President Donald Trump took office in late January, complicates the moment. While tensions recently eased with a U.S.-China deal to reduce tariffs for 90 days, the uncertain economic environment could influence companies' decisions. Blumberg, who answered MedTech Dive's questions in April during the economic drop, said some companies may decide to wait. 'Depending on how things play out, some of these companies may elect to wait for calmer markets,' Blumberg said. 'I have no doubt that they will have ample funding opportunities and it is only a matter of time before we see a new class of very high-quality public medical device companies.' Companies typically go public as a way to pay out private investors and raise money after demonstrating solid fundamental financials. It's not a simple decision to make, however — going public is a long and challenging process that can take the better part of a year, require dozens of meetings with banks and potential investors, and should only happen when a company has the correct financials and leadership team in place. Ceribell first decided to pursue an IPO in 2024 — about nine months before the actual IPO date — after preparing for about three years. Babitt said one of the key factors for companies is to have reliable visibility into their revenue streams, and they must demonstrate that visibility to institutional investors, along with about a $50 million run rate. Companies that do not have good revenue visibility tend to struggle once public, he added, which was the case for some companies in the 2021 IPO spike. Companies that had $30 million or $40 million in sales but didn't have visibility and were unable to grow revenue by double digits in a quarter were 'punished, quite frankly,' said Babitt, who did not name specific firms. One of the biggest challenges after going public, along with forecasting and delivering on growth every quarter, is being vulnerable to market dynamics that are largely out of your hands. 'There's a lack of control that's frustrating,' Beta Bionics CEO Sean Saint said. 'The market moves, and all of a sudden, our stock moves for zero reason associated with anything with Beta Bionics.' Saint explained that macroeconomic factors move the stock for a number of reasons, including Beta Bionics being a smaller stock, a new entrant to public markets and investors not yet building up complete positions. 'For those reasons, we've become more volatile than the market as a whole,' he added. 'We understand why that is, but it doesn't change the fact that we have zero control over it.' Companies that recently held public offerings — and chose their go-public dates months ahead of time — quickly learned that lesson. Stock prices for the new companies have mostly struggled for much of the year as macroeconomic conditions have whiplashed the U.S. economy under the Trump administration, largely due to its tariff strategy. Ceribell, Beta Bionics and Anteris all saw their stock prices decline in late March and April when tariff tensions were high. The lack of control, Babitt said, is why 'you want high-quality candidates from whatever sector to be out there, so that their story truly hasn't changed; their revenue profile truly hasn't changed.' Closing stock prices for Kestra Medical, Ceribell, Beta Bionics and Anteris Technologies from Oct. 10, 2024, to May 27. This embedded content is not available in your region. Babitt said companies that work with EY have not decided to cancel their planned IPOs because of recent volatility. The question of whether the medical device industry's IPO window is open has a complicated answer. The four public offerings in as many months could be a sign that more companies are ready — the IPOs themselves could also inspire activity. Or companies could delay to let the economy settle for a little while longer. The lengthy timeline of a public offering could also mean that companies that planned in January, or sometime in the first quarter, to go public will not actually begin selling shares until 2026, regardless of economic conditions. PitchBook's DeGagne said 2025 will likely not be the IPO moment others believe it could be. Medline Industries is rumored to be looking to go public in the near future, a company DeGagne is watching, along with Heart Flow, which develops artificial intelligence for coronary artery disease. Medtronic also announced that it plans to spin off its diabetes business and take the company public through an IPO within the next 18 months. 'We could see some additional listings here and there. But I think a lot of companies are still comfortable kind of waiting on the sidelines for now,' DeGagne said. Babitt sees it differently. EY has already worked with several companies that plan to go public. Kestra and Beta Bionics also upsized their expectations at the last minute. For example, Beta Bionics originally planned to raise about $114 million but ultimately raised more than $200 million. 'Everybody took notice of that,' Babitt said. An IPO window does need a stable market to remain open, otherwise good candidates will wait or could even pursue other avenues like M&A. As tariff tensions ease with China, and the stock market rebounds, that moment could be here. 'I'm optimistic with the second half,' said Babitt. Recommended Reading Beta Bionics raises $204M in IPO Sign in to access your portfolio

Ceribell to Participate in the William Blair 45th Annual Growth Stock Conference
Ceribell to Participate in the William Blair 45th Annual Growth Stock Conference

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Ceribell to Participate in the William Blair 45th Annual Growth Stock Conference

SUNNYVALE, Calif., May 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CeriBell, Inc. (Nasdaq: CBLL) ('Ceribell'), a medical technology company focused on transforming the diagnosis and management of patients with serious neurological conditions, today announced that Jane Chao, Ph.D., CEO and Co-founder, will present at the upcoming William Blair 45th Annual Growth Stock Conference. The presentation will take place on Tuesday, June 3, 2025, at 7:20 a.m. Pacific Standard Time / 9:20 a.m. Central Standard Time. Event: William Blair 45th Annual Growth Stock ConferenceDate: Tuesday, June 3, 2025Time: 7:20 a.m. PST / 9:20 a.m. CST A live and archived webcast of the presentation will be available in the "Investor Relations" section of the Ceribell website at About CeriBell, Inc. Ceribell is a medical technology company focused on transforming the diagnosis and management of patients with serious neurological conditions. Ceribell has developed the Ceribell System, a novel, point-of-care electroencephalography ('EEG') platform specifically designed to address the unmet needs of patients in the acute care setting. By combining proprietary, highly portable, and rapidly deployable hardware with sophisticated artificial intelligence ('AI')-powered algorithms, the Ceribell System enables rapid diagnosis and continuous monitoring of patients with neurological conditions. The Ceribell System is FDA-cleared for detecting suspected seizure activity and currently utilized in intensive care units and emergency rooms across the U.S. Ceribell is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California. For more information, please visit or follow the company on LinkedIn. Investor ContactBrian Johnston or Laine MorganGilmartin GroupInvestors@ Media ContactCorrie RosePress@

ShangBay Capital's William Dai Recognized Among GrowthCap's Top 25 Healthcare Investors for 2025
ShangBay Capital's William Dai Recognized Among GrowthCap's Top 25 Healthcare Investors for 2025

Business Wire

time01-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Wire

ShangBay Capital's William Dai Recognized Among GrowthCap's Top 25 Healthcare Investors for 2025

PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--ShangBay Capital, a prominent venture capital firm specializing in healthcare investments, proudly announces the inclusion of William Dai in GrowthCap's esteemed list of top healthcare investors for 2025. This prestigious accolade marks William Dai's third year being recognized as one of GrowthCap's Top 25 Healthcare Investors. His exceptional contributions to the healthcare sector, alongside a distinguished cohort of industry leaders, highlight his position as one of the foremost investors in the field. The selection process focused on investment expertise, track record, impact on the healthcare landscape, and support for portfolio company growth. William Dai, Founding Managing Partner at ShangBay Capital, spearheads the firm's healthcare investment initiatives, with a particular emphasis on medtech ventures. Since its inception in 2015, ShangBay Capital, under William's leadership, has emerged as a successful venture capital entity, nurturing 72 portfolio companies and achieving multiple successful exits. ShangBay's investment portfolio includes Ceribell, an AI-enabled EEG system that has become one of the best Medtech IPOs in recent years, and where ShangBay was the first institutional investor. Additionally, ShangBay has syndicated 26 portfolio companies with major strategics. Currently, William serves on the boards of directors for Luminopia, Aqua Medical, Meditrina, FemDx, and YorLabs. He has also previously served on the boards of NeuroVasc (acquired in 2019) and Arrinex (acquired by Stryker in 2019). As the Founding Managing Partner at ShangBay Capital, he has played a critical role in leading and executing investment transactions to drive business success. With over two decades of experience in corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, and capital markets across Asia and the U.S., William Dai brings a wealth of expertise to the healthcare investment realm. Prior to founding ShangBay Capital, he held CFO positions at ShangPharma (NYSE: SHP), Nepstar Corporation (NYSE: NPD), Microport Scientific Corporation (HK: 00853), and Boston Scientific China, where he played pivotal roles in driving business transactions and fostering organizational success. 'This past year has underscored the profound impact that medical technology can have on improving patient outcomes. I feel privileged to contribute to this dynamic and meaningful field, working alongside innovators who are redefining what's possible in healthcare. As we look ahead, I remain committed to supporting the next generation of pioneering medtech companies,' remarked William Dai.

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