The Heparin Disaster
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The Heparin Disaster



Thursday, June 26, 2008  

Who owns Scientific Protein Labs?

The information in this post is based on information in the public domain.

We have written earlier about Scientific Protein Labs (SPL) and the role they played in providing Baxter with the heparin that had been cut with oversulfated chondroitin sulfate. But unlike Baxter, which is a publicly traded company, the stock in SPL is privately held. 89% of SPL was purchased about 2 years ago for the price of $135 million. The purchaser was American Capital Strategies, Ltd., ("ACAS") a private equity firm headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, which is publicly traded under the symbol ACAS.
Area biotech sold again: Helps make heparin

The Capital Times

By Mike Ivey

August 23, 2006

A company founded 30 years ago to make use of pig intestines from the Oscar Mayer slaughterhouse has changed owners again.

Scientific Protein Laboratories of Waunakee has been acquired by American Capital Strategies, a Washington, D.C.-area buyout firm that is publicly traded on the Nasdaq stock exchange.

A sales price was not released but the company had sold for $81 million in 2004 to Arsenal Capital Partners, a New York-based private equity firm. Prior to that, the company was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Wyeth Pharmaceuticals.

SPL has 150 employees at its facility here, where it produces the active ingredient used in the manufacture of heparin, a common anti-blood clotting drug. The company also has a small facility in Changzhou, China, with about 30 employees.

Complete Article

ACAS had placed a fair value of $176M on SPL as of 12/31/2007. The total asset value of ACAS is about $11 Billion. Thus SPL represents about 1.6% of ACAS total assets. According to the New York Times story published earlier this week:

American Capital, which owns stakes in some 170 companies, booked $29.6 million in unrealized depreciation related to its investment in Scientific Protein in the first quarter [of 2008].

American Capital’s stock is down about $4 since February, but that appears more related to the company’s write-downs on some of its assets, including mortgage bonds. Jefferies, the investment bank, downgraded American Capital’s stock to underperform in April, but did not mention the tainted blood thinner in its report.

NYT Story May 23, 2008

An article today posted on The Street.com titled "Valuations Haunt American Capital" contains this information:

American Capital's investment in Scientific Protein Labs (referred to as SPL Acquisition in regulatory filings) had a fair value of $176 million on American Capital's balance sheet at the end of 2007. The valuation dropped to $141 million at the end of the first quarter, as American Capital wrote down the value of its preferred-stock investment from $41 million to $10 million. (The news story on the bad heparin broke in the first quarter).

But the firm's $131 million debt investment in SPL was essentially left untouched.

At American Capital's annual investor day last week, one audience member questioned the valuation of Scientific Protein.

"I'm trying to understand, as we're trying to get comfortable with valuations through the portfolio, how the debt of a company that is looking at lawsuits that could probably bankrupt it if even a fraction of them come to fruition, how that can possibly be marked at par?" the unidentified audience member asked a panel of American Capital officials, according to a webcast replay of the event.

American Capital CEO Malon Wilkus, who was in the audience and not on the panel, immediately grabbed the microphone from the questioner, according to an investor who attended the event.

Wilkus said the situation was very sad, but he called Scientific Protein a "very good company ... and we think it will do extremely well," according to the webcast.

He did point out that Scientific Protein had some insurance to cover itself from lawsuits but stopped short of saying how much.

"I think that is about all we can say about the company specifically," he said.

The ACAS public financials do not disclose what amount of money SPL made from the CZ-SPL and China imports. SPL continues to make heparin from domestic sources as well as some other products. But the FDA has blocked any imports of heparin from SPL's wholly owned subsidiary CZ-SPL.

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