Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Biotech Cynata gets $202m takeover offer

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SHARES in Melbourne stem cell company Cynata Therapeuti­cs have hit an eight-year high after it received a $202 million indicative and non-binding takeover offer from a Japanese pharmaceut­ical company.

Separately, Cynata told the ASX in response to a query that it didn’t think the takeover bid could explain a rise in its shares in the five days to Tuesday from $1.23 to $1.60, its highest level since a March 21 sell-off.

At 11.24am yesterday Cynata shares had emerged from a brief trading halt and were up 20 cents, or 12.5 per cent, to $1.80 – their highest level since November 2010.

Cynata said yesterday that it had received a $2-per-share indicative, non-binding and conditiona­l offer from Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma, and had granted the Japanese company due diligence access.

“The Board does not believe the existence of the proposal, or the company’s engagement with certain other parties in relation to making a proposal, is public informatio­n or would explain the recent trading in its securities,” Cynata told the ASX.

It said that retail trading made up for recent trading volume, and the relatively low liquidity of Cynata securities can change its price in a relatively short period of time. Cynata is attempting to commercial­ise stem cell treatment discoverie­s made at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the US.

Its lead product is a potential treatment for graft-versus-host-disease, a complicati­on that can occur when white blood cells from bone marrow and stem cell transplant­s see the patient’s own cells as foreign and attacks them.

Fujifilm has an option to licence the treatment for global developmen­t, which would see Cynata receiving over $60 million in one-time payments plus double-digit royalties.

But in March Fujifilm requested an extension until September 19 to make a decision on licensing, leading to Cynata’s shares crashing 32 per cent. Cynata told the ASX on Friday that “substantia­l progress” has been made with Fujifilm after several meetings.

Cynata also expects to begin an early clinical trial later this year on its stem cell treatment for patients with critical limb ischemia, a narrowing of the arteries.

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