Investment guidelines

Triple Helix Capital’s Funds focus on investment opportunities across the globe.

The management team has deep knowledge of the healthcare, biotech and technology sectors in North America, Europe, MENA and APAC which will allow it to source attractive investment opportunities along the below guidelines:

Target Investment

Return p.a.: 25%+

Geography

Worldwide

Holding Period

3- 5 Years

Asset Class

Private and Pre-IPO
Companies

Indicative Ticket

$5m - $15m

Sectors

Healthcare
Biotech
Tech

Investment Style

Growth
Event-Driven
Special Situations

Impact Investing

Focused on Social Impact
and Shariah compliance

Sector of Focus One: Biotechnologies

Defining Biotechnologies

Biotechnology involves the application of biological entities including organisms, systems, and processes to develop, make, or modify products for specific uses. It encompasses a wide range of procedures for modifying such entities according to human needs.

Products comprise:

Biotechnology definitions are loose across the private and public sectors, as well as across countries. However, while production of traditional small molecule drugs may include biotechnological steps, such drugs are not considered biotech

Biotechnology will shape the next era of human development with an impact as significant as that of the computer revolution

New applications enabled by biotech include replacing organ cells, early diagnosis of cancers, and driving food sustainability

Sector Trends: The growth trajectory is to continue upwards over the coming years driven by new technologies and demographic changes

Sub-Sector Focus

Sector of Focus Two: Digital Health

Digital transformation initiatives in the healthcare sector have continued to accelerate post-pandemic, with a clear focus on digitizing and improving the patient experience.

The 5 tech giants (Alphabet, Meta, Amazon, Apple and Microsoft) are aggressively investing in digital health start-ups (Microsoft via M12, Google via GV, Amazon via the Alexa Fund, etc.), developing new products (Meta’s smartwatch, Apple’s health app and apple watch, Google’s Derm Assist, Amazon primary care, etc.) or setting-up partnerships (Meta’s Alliance for Advancing Health Online, Apple’s health records data-sharing, Microsoft’s partnership with insurers, Google’s deal with HCA, etc.)

Global healthcare investment funding in 2021 surpassed $59B across nearly 3,000 deals. The acceleration of digital transformation initiatives was a major contributor, with digital health startups accounting for 40% of both the deals and funding raised.

A myriad of new market entrants in 2021 pushed early-stage deal share to 60% of global healthcare deals, the highest since Q3’19.

M&A activity persisted within digital health as acquisition hotspots included primary care, women’s health, and mental health, for a total of 605 deals in 2021.

Medical innovation activity retained its momentum as a main market driver: Aging populations, the rising prevalence of chronic disease, and technological developments continue to drive innovation of safer, more effective, or life-changing medical products such as drugs and devices.

Sub-Sector Focus

AI

Companies selling Al SaaS to healthcare clients or using Al to develop products for the healthcare market.

Telehealth

Companies developing or using information communication technology to aid the delivery of health & wellness services from a distance.

Medical Devices

Companies developing medical devices that aid in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, monitoring, or prevention of disease.

Mental Health Tech

Companies applying technology to problems of emotional, psychological, and social well-being

Digital Therapeutics

Companies developing evidence-based, software- driven therapeutic interventions to prevent, manage, or treat medical conditions

Omics

Companies involved in the capture, sequencing, and/or analysis of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and/or metabolomic data

Health IT

Companies that market software solutions to healthcare provider organizations

Investment Model

The Model is based on 3 pillars

Group 9081

Platform and Technology Based

Based on meta-platforms spanning a wide array of applications

Group 9086

Impact and Localization Oriented

Based on social impact, localization of IP and Shariah compliance

Group 9087

Value Chain Focused

Based on high value creating segments

Focus on Technology Platforms:

Biotech platforms are scientific bases along with the associated methods and technologies that enable creation of biotech applications. They sit between basic sciences (chemistry, physics, etc.) and biotech applications.

Triple Helix Capital will focus on a specific number of meta-platforms, including Genomics / Multi-Omics, Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Bioinformatics, Tissue Engineering, etc.

Focus on Impact & Localization:

The platforms of focus have the potential to positively impact the GCC region through a multitude of use cases, including, Cell and Gene Therapy, Regenerative Medicine, Green Genetic Engineering, etc. thereby addressing the top 10 leading causes of death (Ischemic Heart Disease, Stroke, CKD, Respiratory Infections, Cirrhosis, Diabetes, etc.) and providing an answer to unmet needs and national security priorities. More specifically:

  • Crop productivity: currently low productivity driven by harsh climate and fresh water scarcity
  • Food security: currently there is high reliance on imports, low self-sufficiency in fruits and vegetables, only focused on lower efficiency proteins
  • Pharma sufficiency and pandemic readiness: currently vast majority of pharma products are imported, no biologics manufacturing facilities, no vaccine production expertise, no stock-piling
  • Safe Birth: currently there is a high prevalence of genetic diseases compared to global peers associated to high lifetime treatment costs, and low pre-marital and pre-natal testing
 

Value Chain Focused

The Valley of Death is a phenomenon witnessed by the majority of the R&D ecosystems in the world and happens when science-based innovation face challenges and hindrances due to a lack of support and funding. This phenomenon impacts the GCC and MENA region disproportionately due to severe regulatory hurdles, funding scarcity, lack of investor awareness of the risk/reward conundrum, and general cultural unpreparedness. The third pillar of Triple Helix Capital’s investment model addresses this aspect specifically.

The Valley of Death

coincides with the segments of the value chain that drive value creation for investors:

Group 9070

Basic Research

Has a very slow payoff until commercialization and is usually covered by academic institutions

Group 9076

Applied Reasearch

Addresses the "valley of death" problem where many valid and promising science ideas do not materialize into products. Applied research is solution- specific and aims at addressing practical local problems

Group 9069

Product Trials & Prototyping

Strengthens localization and allows products to be more targeted to local needs

Group 9068

Scale-up Manufacturing

Off-patent products are highly competitive (not profitable) and therefore are out of our value chain focus

Triple Helix Capital’s approach to value chain investing covers the full spectrum of the Valley of Death phenomenon

For early-stage (and more project-focused) ventures, Triple Helix Capital will seek value creation through:

  • Leveraging strategic partnerships with pharma and investment community
  • M&A exit at “Proof of Concept in humans” either to established biopharma or other VCs/PEs
  • Focus on specific therapeutic areas such as oncology, immunology, metabolic, neurodegeneration, and such

For late-stage ventures, Triple Helix Capital will seek value creation through selecting companies:

  • With commercial potential or late-stage with products going into Phase 2b/3 trials
  • That are candidate for M&A within 2 to 4 years of investment
  • That could aim for an IPO exit within 3 to 5 years of investment