Los Angeles Times

NantHealth shares debut

- By Samantha Masunaga and Melody Petersen esamantha.masunaga@latimes.com melody.petersen@latimes.com

The biotech start-up run by L.A. billionair­e Patrick Soon-Shiong had a strong IPO. Its shares surged 33%.

Shares of biotech startup NantHealth, run by Los Angeles billionair­e physician Patrick Soon-Shiong, had a strong first day of trading Thursday, closing 33% above their offer price.

NantHealth shares closed at $18.59, up $4.59. NantHealth offered 6.5 million new shares at $14 a share, raising more than $90 million. That amounts to 5.5% of the company’s total shares after the offering. At the offer price, the company was valued at $1.65 billion.

NantHealth sells software and medical records systems to hospitals and other providers. It soon plans to commercial­ly sell a cancer test that analyzes patients’ DNA to determine the best treatments. The company is one of a collection of start-ups that SoonShiong operates from the Culver City headquarte­rs of parent firm NantWorks.

“I’m pleased at the reaction to the IPO,” SoonShiong said in an interview Thursday morning.

In a regulatory filing, NantHealth said SoonShiong, its chairman and chief executive, would control about 58% or more of the company after the sale.

NantHealth’s first-day gains were “encouragin­g,” said Matt Kennedy, an analyst at Renaissanc­e Capital, a manager of IPO exchange traded funds. But he noted that NantKwest, another of Soon-Shiong’s companies that went public last year, also had strong performanc­e in its stock market debut and closed at nearly 40% higher than its offer price. NantKwest is now 70% below its offer price, he said.

NantKwest also now faces a lawsuit from investors after it announced it was restating its financial statements just months after selling shares in July. Those accounting errors related, in part, to SoonShiong’s compensati­on package of stock and options, which NantKwest valued at about $148 million, according to corporate filings.

“There is a lot of uncertaint­y around what sort of market share it can get,” Kennedy said of NantHealth. “It is a speculativ­e play on a next-generation cancer test, so I think that after it’s traded for a few months, we’ll have a better idea of what investors see it’s actually worth.”

He said the stock’s strong first-day performanc­e could be because of investor confidence in Soon-Shiong, his partnershi­ps and his previous successes.

Some of NantHealth’s existing investors, including parties affiliated with SoonShiong, were interested in buying up to $70 million worth of the new shares, according to the filing.

Last month, SoonShiong invested $70.5 million in Tribune Publishing, The Times’ parent, becoming the newspaper company’s second-largest shareholde­r. He also holds a minority stake in the L.A. Lakers.

Founded in 2010, NantHealth already has accumulate­d more than $300 million in losses. The company explained in its public-offering statement that it expects the losses to continue. “We may never achieve or sustain profitabil­ity in the future,” the filing warned.

NantHealth is focused on the emerging field of personaliz­ed medicine, or using an individual’s health data to determine what medical care he or she needs.

One of NantHealth’s key products is the GPS Cancer test, which uses supercompu­ters to analyze the DNA of patients’ tumors in an attempt to find drugs that work against the disease.

The test is at the center of a research effort that SoonShiong calls the Cancer MoonShot 2020. In the work, a collaborat­ion of hospitals, insurers and drug companies are focused on finding treatments that use the body’s own immune system to fight cancer.

The cancer test falls into a regulatory loophole and doesn’t need approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion under current rules.

The company said in the stock filing that NantHealth’s performanc­e depends on its ability to “drive adoption” of the GPS Cancer test at price reimbursem­ents from insurers that make it profitable.

NantHealth added that the test was “a novel and largely unproven approach.”

Judy Hanover, research director at market research firm IDC, said the product has a lot of potential but its integratio­n into health systems’ workflows could prove challengin­g.

The NantHealth filing said Soon-Shiong is expected to “devote on average at least 20 hours per week” at the company, while “primarily” focusing on NantKwest.

The lead underwrite­r on the offering was Jefferies. NantHealth’s stock is listed on the Nasdaq exchange under the symbol NH.

 ?? Bob Chamberlin Los Angeles Times ?? PATRICK SOON-SHIONG, NantHealth’s chairman and CEO, said he was “pleased at the reaction to the IPO.” Above in 2005, he draws an illustrati­on about tumor cells and how they react to cancer treatment.
Bob Chamberlin Los Angeles Times PATRICK SOON-SHIONG, NantHealth’s chairman and CEO, said he was “pleased at the reaction to the IPO.” Above in 2005, he draws an illustrati­on about tumor cells and how they react to cancer treatment.

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