Irish Independent

Dublin-based healthcare firm Integumen to raise €8m for reverse takeover

- John Mulligan

DUBLIN-BASED personal healthcare firm Integumen, listed on London’s AIM, is planning to raise £7.5m (€8.7m) as it buys Galway-based firm Cellulac, which has developed products to make biodegrada­ble plastic used in the cosmetics, nutritiona­l food and healthcare sectors.

Cellulac is owned by investors including Gerard Brandon, once the chief executive of Irish wound-care firm Alltracel.

Integumen’s non-executive chairman is Tony Richardson, previously a CEO of Alltracel.

Upon completion of the deal, which will constitute a reverse takeover, Mr Brandon will become chief executive of Integumen, whose name will be changed to Cellulac.

Mr Richardson is also chief executive of drug-developmen­t firm Venn Life Sciences, which owns about a quarter of Integumen.

Integumen, which floated on the Alternativ­e Investment Market in London last year, said the proposed acquisitio­n of Cellulac will enable it to enter the “highly attractive bio-materials and nutritiona­l food sector, complement­ing its existing personal care business”.

The Integumen board said that it has previously recognised the need to expand its revenue-generating activities through product acquisitio­ns.

It said that it is also in the process of undertakin­g a “small debt or equity raise”, in associatio­n with Cellulac, to pay on-going transactio­n costs and to increase its financial resources. The company has also approved a cost-reduction and cost-deferral programme with the aim of saving about £40,000 a month.

The £7.5m that Integumen plans to raise is significan­tly more than the £1.8m (€2m) it raised last year in its flotation, which at the time gave the fledgling company an £8.2m market capitalisa­tion. Its current market capitalisa­tion is just £1.9m.

Integumen said yesterday that following the acquisitio­n of Cellulac, the enlarged group will focus on biodegrada­ble plastic ingredient­s, cosmetics and human grade food supplement­s. It will also have a portfolio of products in oral care, medical and cosmetics.

Cellulac has 35 shareholde­rs, including Mr Brandon and investors from Austria, Germany and Poland.

Investors in the company also include a number of Galway-based backers such as Patrick Walsh, the founder of the company.

Cellulac was spun out of

NUI Galway.

Acquisitio­n will allow entry to bio-materials and nutritiona­l food sectors

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