The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is boosting its intellectual property portfolio by purchasing royalty rights to a cancer drug.
CPPIB Credit Europe, a wholly owned subsidiary of the pension fund, has acquired the rights to a portion of future royalties in the drug, venetoclax, from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Australia.
The transaction includes an upfront cash payment of about $315 million and possible milestone payments of more than $90 million, with the institute maintaining partial royalties for the drug. Venetoclax is specifically effective as treatment for certain patients with relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
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“This investment is an attractive opportunity to expand CPPIB’s global intellectual property program through the acquisition of royalty rights for this proven anti-cancer treatment,” said John Graham, managing director and head of principal credit investments at the CPPIB. “With stable, long-term cash flows, alternative assets like intellectual property add diversification to the CPP fund as performance is generally uncorrelated to that of the broader capital markets.”
The CPPIB launched its strategy to invest in rights for royalties, patents, trademarks and copyrights, primarily in the pharmaceutical and technology sectors, in 2011. Since then, it has invested about $3 billion in the area.
Besides the drug transaction, the CPPIB also announced its wholly owned subsidiary, CPPIB Credit Investments Inc., will issue a more than $400-million subordinated facility to Intu Properties, a British real estate investment trust.
The investment is indirectly secured against the trust’s Trafford Centre in Manchester, a major shopping centre in Britain.
“This investment fits well with our strategy of providing customized, large-scale funding solutions to best-in-class operators of high-quality underlying real estate assets,” Geoff Souter, managing director and head of private real estate debt.
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