Advertisement
UK markets closed
  • NIKKEI 225

    38,236.07
    -37.98 (-0.10%)
     
  • HANG SENG

    18,207.13
    +444.10 (+2.50%)
     
  • CRUDE OIL

    79.06
    +0.06 (+0.08%)
     
  • GOLD FUTURES

    2,313.40
    +2.40 (+0.10%)
     
  • DOW

    38,225.66
    +322.37 (+0.85%)
     
  • Bitcoin GBP

    46,968.75
    +1,203.38 (+2.63%)
     
  • CMC Crypto 200

    1,270.55
    -0.19 (-0.02%)
     
  • NASDAQ Composite

    15,840.96
    +235.48 (+1.51%)
     
  • UK FTSE All Share

    4,446.15
    +27.55 (+0.62%)
     

This young biotech fund is worth a punt at a 25pc discount

biotech rtw
biotech rtw

Investment trust bargain hunter Nick Greenwood has recently bought a small stake in RTW Biotech Opportunities and investors who seek growth should consider doing the same as shares in small drug developers rally off extreme lows.

Greenwood, who runs the Migo Opportunities Trust and specialises in buying listed funds when they are cheap and out of favour, said in the trust’s interim report last month that he had snapped up the dollar‑denominated but London-listed RTW when the shares were at $1.10.

This left his fund with a stake worth £675,000 at the end of October. The shares have since surged by 26.4pc, thanks in part to a potentially lucrative plan for RTW to expand by an all-share takeover of rival Arix Bioscience.

ADVERTISEMENT

The deal, which still requires approval from Arix’s shareholders, has proved controversial. Peel Hunt, a corporate broker for Arix, resigned in protest at the proposal for its biggest shareholder, Acacia Research of the US, to be bought out in cash while other investors had to settle for 1.4663 RTW shares for every Arix share they owned.

While the City ponders the rights and wrongs of the transaction, the benefit to RTW from absorbing Arix looks enormous. For an outlay of $146m (£116m), it receives assets estimated to be worth $213m.

Alongside the cut-price collection of listed and unlisted biotech stocks it also gets $60m of cash that it can plough into new investments.

The prospect of that cheap financing has pushed RTW shares to a 21-month high of $1.39, which Greenwood said increased the likelihood that Arix investors would approve the merger.

Despite the rebound, RTW shares still do not look expensive; they are a long way off their $2.44 peak of nearly two years ago and trade at a 25pc discount to the net asset value of $1.87 estimated by Morningstar, the investment analyst. The last valuation published by the company put the NAV at $1.65 on Nov 30.

Optimism that interest rates in Britain and America will be cut this year has also helped to repair some of the damage caused by last year’s surge in interest rates. Fears about the impact of high borrowing costs on speculative, early-stage companies crushed biotech stocks after the Covid pandemic boom to the point that by last summer some smaller drug companies were trading below the value of the cash they held.

Greenwood says the revival will not be short lived and that RTW shares can recover to closer to NAV. His confidence comes from the sector’s success in launching new treatments as a record number of drug approvals fuel bids from major pharmaceutical companies.

“Fifty per cent of new products are developed by smaller companies, so the long-term winners are unlikely to be the big stocks,” he says. “A significant number of ‘blockbuster’ drugs are coming off patent so big pharma has an urgent need, and the necessary cash, to buy biotechs to restock product lines.”

RTW, managed by a team of healthcare investment experts in New York led by founder Roderick Wong, likes to back biotech companies from the start.

Its biggest success since launch in 2019 came in April when the US drugs giant Merck pounced on Prometheus Biosciences with a $10.8bn bid, attracted by its treatment for inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn’s.

RTW, which had nearly 15pc of its money in the company and first invested $8.4m into Prometheus three years ago, received proceeds of $99.1m. It has used some of this money to buy back its shares, so enhancing shareholder returns.

While RTW’s portfolio of 38 investments in America, China and Europe is not for everyone, Greenwood says that “counterintuitively, the sector acts defensively heading into a recession” because biotech shares tend to do well as US government bonds rise when interest rates fall in a downturn.

RTW is not the only horse the fund manager is backing, though. He has added RTW to his portfolio alongside bigger positions in the Biotech Growth and International Biotechnology trusts. Both are previous Questor tips.

This column thinks investors should take a leaf out of Greenwood’s book and consider a small holding in a trust well positioned in a sector that is enjoying a strong cyclical recovery.

Questor says: buy 

Ticker: RTW 

Share price at close: $1.39 


Read the latest Questor column on telegraph.co.uk every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 6am

Read Questor’s rules of investment before you follow our tips