Globus Medical Inc. is ready to run.
Earlier this week, the company settled its lawsuit with Synthes USA, reaching an agreement that absolved Globus of allegedly stealing trade secrets and key personnel from Synthes. As part of the deal, Globus agreed to pay Synthes $13.5 million in cash and to not hire any additional Synthes employees for one year.
Freed by the drag of that lawsuit, Globus today announced it raised a $110 million Series E investment in a round assembled by Clarus Ventures, which led a syndicate of private equity investors with a commitment north of $50 million. AIG SunAmerica is the only other identified investor although several private equity firms supposedly took part.
Not that the company had exactly been standing still. Started in 2003 by CEO David Paul and other executives who left Synthes, Globus Medical last year reported more than $80 million in revenue. The size of the settlement surprised some. (Healthpoint Capital's blog has some nice before and after takes here and here. But the Philadelphia Inquirer suggested at least one juror saw some holes in Globus' case.)
Hard to say for sure why the settlement happened, but it's easy to envision Globus executives opting to settle quickly with $110 million piled atop their board room table.
The massive deal signals two developments. The first involves Globus which currently resides on the second-tier of the spinal device market. Medtronic Sofamar Danek, Depuy Spine, Synthes USA, Stryker Corp and Zimmer Spine Inc./Zimmer Holdings Inc. still lead the way. But Globus is now positioned to make a move past other mid-tier players like Blackstone Medical Inc., NuVasive Inc., Alphatec Spine Inc and others. The capital infusion enables the company to plow through with sales of its fusion products while advancing its internally developed line of non-fusion implants and spinal spacers. For more on these areas go to MedTech Insight reports here and here.
The second interesting aspect of this financing of course involves Clarus Ventures, the firm founded by five former partners of MPM Capital who left in a very public split two years ago. This financing will likely be reported as a significant “venture capital” deal, probably the biggest since CardioNet secured its $110 million (which also wasn’t really a venture capital round.) But make no mistake, this is a private equity-style investment with private equity firms involved.
Private equity firms continue to survey the medical device industry, and orthopedics particularly, for opportunities. While the Globus deal clearly resides in a different neighborhood than the $10.9 billion acquisition of Biomet Inc. by Blackstone, KKR and others, it demonstrates how well-heeled venture firms--such as Clarus--can position themselves as private equity players, at least when when medical devices are involved. The $50 million-plus investment in Globus represents roughly 10% of the $500 million debut fund that Clarus closed on at the start of 2006, so it’s a big bet. It also may be the last device deal in this debut fund.
Clarus is clearly comfortable with big wagers as it demonstrated with its participation in the $80 million financing for Sientra, which is pushing for FDA approval of a silicon-based breast implant.
Check out our next issue of START-UP to hear more about the deal and Clarus.
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