Drug royalties in a real asset portfolio
Skip to main content
pilogo-NEW
Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • My Account
  • login
  • NEWS
    • Asset owners and the coronavirus
    • Alternatives
    • Consultants
    • Coronavirus
    • Defined Contribution
    • ESG
    • Frontlines
    • Hedge Funds
    • Investing / Portfolio Strategies
    • Money Management
    • Pension Funds
    • People Moves
    • Private Equity
    • Real Estate
    • Searches & Hires News
    • SECURE Act
    • Special Reports
    • WorldPensionSummit
    • Ron Schmitz
      Pandemic drives faster transition for Virginia to private markets
      Mubadala Investment Co. logo
      Mubadala draws on portfolio in coronavirus fight
      T.J. Carlson
      Texas Muni reduces downside risk during pandemic, finding opportunities now
      Scott Davis
      ‘Triage plan’ at Indiana system helped stem losses
    • Deborah Pederson and David J. Rothenberg
      Arena hires 3 to boost global marketing of private credit strategies
      BentallGreenOak agrees to acquire Metropolitan Real Estate Equity
      watch video
      0:45
      Private funds weathered 2020 turmoil
      Daniel McHugh
      Aviva Investors promotes from within for real assets CIO
    • Kieran Mistry
      Hymans Robertson picks head for new non-traditional risk transfer unit
      Troy Saharic
      NEPC brings on director of new business development
      Bill Foley
      Foley-backed SPAC agrees to $7.3 billion deal with Alight
      Jason Schwarz, chief operating officer of Wilshire,
      New owners have big plans for future of Wilshire
    • Senate virus relief bill drops retirement plan COLA freeze
      A pharmacist administers a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in Mountain Brook, Ala., on Feb. 21, 2021
      Business optimism grows as vaccinations spread – Fed
      watch video
      0:59
      Coronavirus and the S&P 500: February 2021
      Multiemployer pension measures cleared for relief bill vote
    • Desktop with document showing pie chart with investment types along with a calculator
      OECD proposes revision of its DC ‘good design’ roadmap
      Dominic Scriven, director and portfolio manger of Dragon Capital, speaks during an interview in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam in 2006
      Vietnam gets its first private defined contribution plan
      DCALTA releases daily valuation tool for alts in DC plans
      PSCA: Employee participation in non-qualified deferred comp plans rising
    • Vapor rises from a petrochemical plant
      New York State Common reaches more corporate climate agreements
      Michael Herskovich
      BNP Paribas Asset Management names global head of stewardship
      TPT Retirement taps into low-carbon strategies
      Gary Gensler
      Nominee Gensler backs SEC climate risk disclosure
    • Spirit winners
      Prudential honors young people who are helping out
      2 U.K. pension execs take on ESG investing in new podcast
      Donation illustration
      Jefferies will use trading commissions to do good
      Michael Arougheti
      SPACs ride wave as latest investment darling
    • Robert 'Rob' Shafir listens during a Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearing in Washington on Feb. 26, 2014
      Sculptor hedge fund hits sixth straight year of outflows
      The WallStreetBets forum on the Reddit Inc. website on a laptop computer and the GameStop logo on a smartphone in an arranged photo.
      GameStop frenzy has hedge fund managers rethinking next moves
      Gabe Plotkin, chief investment officer and portfolio manager of Melvin Capital Management, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York on May 6, 2019
      Citadel, Point72 back Melvin with $2.75 billion after losses
      Shanghai skyline
      Global hedge funds struggle even in a more open China market
    • Louisiana Teachers rehires Mondrian as small-cap manager
      CalSTRS adds alts investments to ESG-themed portfolio
      Vapor rises from a petrochemical plant
      New York State Common reaches more corporate climate agreements
      Pennsylvania State Employees launches search for fixed-income managers
    • Manulife taps UBS veteran to oversee its China business
      Herman Bril
      Arabesque Asset Management chooses first CEO
      Railpen hires head trader in preparation for in-house trading
      Andy Moniz
      Acadian picks responsible investing director
    • CalSTRS adds alts investments to ESG-themed portfolio
      District of Columbia Retirement Board executive director to retire
      San Antonio fund terminates Lazard from emerging markets strategy
      Fresno County Employees moves $22 million between Eaton Vance funds
    • District of Columbia Retirement Board executive director to retire
      Deborah Pederson and David J. Rothenberg
      Arena hires 3 to boost global marketing of private credit strategies
      Manulife taps UBS veteran to oversee its China business
      Herman Bril
      Arabesque Asset Management chooses first CEO
    • The Charging Bull statue is covered in snow near the New York Stock Exchange on Feb. 11, 2021
      Bain: Private equity managers finish 2020 strong
      Carlyle secures $4.1 billion ESG-related credit facility
      Hamilton Lane raises $3.9 billion for fifth secondary fund
      PSG closes first Europe-focused fund at $1.5 billion
    • AEW chooses head of fund operations and debt finance
      Sebastiano Ferrante and Jocelyn de Verdelon
      PGIM Real Estate turns to staff to fill new roles
      European managers key in on specialist strategies
      Ingrid Jacobs
      Jones Lang LaSalle brings on head of diversity and inclusion
    • Neal and Brady
      Retirement security could be only issue both sides accept
      Retirement cartoon
      Hopes rising for retirement readiness in 2021
      Shawn O'Brien
      Annuities coming to target-date funds, but not right away
      David Ireland
      Sponsors returning to questions about in-plan annuities
    • Charging Bull, sometimes referred to as the Wall Street Bull or the Bowling Green Bull, a bronze sculpture that stands on Broadway just north of Bowling Green in the Financial District of New York City
      Top-performing managers Q4 2020
      P&I 1,000 largest retirement plans: 2021
      Retirement in emerging markets
      Outlook 2021
    • U.S. still a key market for investors
      Collected coverage of P&I's 2020 WorldPensionSummit
      Pedestrians pass a large advertisement on the Arndale Center shopping mall reading 'Act now to avoid a local lockdown' in Manchester, England
      COVID-19 puts new opportunities and risks on the agenda - WPS panelists
      Screens display stock price information over the trading floor of the NYSE Euronext exchange in Paris
      Private assets will continue to grow in portfolios – WPS panelists
  • Data
    • Research Center
    • Searches & Hires Database
    • Searches & Hires News
    • RFPs
    • Charts / Infographics
    • Sponsored Research
    • Trackers
    • Q2 2020 searches and hires overview report
      Q2 2020 money manager M&A activity summary
      Q2 2020 legal overview report
      Q1 2020 searches and hires overview report
    • Louisiana Teachers rehires Mondrian as small-cap manager
      University of Louisville taps Cammack as DC plans consultant
      Cook County allocates $50 million to Mesirow funds
      South Carolina earmarks up to $355 million to 6 funds
    • Louisiana Teachers rehires Mondrian as small-cap manager
      University of Louisville taps Cammack as DC plans consultant
      Cook County allocates $50 million to Mesirow funds
      South Carolina earmarks up to $355 million to 6 funds
    • Independent Investment Consulting Services
      Financial Auditing Services
      Actuarial Services
      Emerging Market Equity Manager Services
    • Taiwan Semiconductor’s No. 1 in the emerging markets book
      U.S. fixed-income returns post another positive year
      Nasdaq delivers an impressive year
      U.S. dollar's recent decline continues
    • Institutional Investors: Shared Expectations, Divergent Paths
      Global Investor Study 2016
      Workplace Financial Wellness
    • U.S. Endowment Returns Tracker
      Pension Fund Returns Tracker
      Earnings Tracker
      Corporate Pension Contribution Tracker
  • Insights
    • Opinion
    • White Papers
    • Industry Voices
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Partner Content
    • Publisher's Update
    • Tesla cartoon
      Don’t confuse wealth creation with retirement saving
      Top 1000 cartoon
      Top 1,000 retirement plans weather storm just fine
      Infrastructure cartoon
      You must go big on infrastructure, Mr. President
      Retirement cartoon
      Hopes rising for retirement readiness in 2021
    • Investment Trends: Looking Ahead Across Equity Sectors
      Rethinking Market and Reference Data Management
      China is embarking on a new stage of growth
      Gold Outlook 2021
    • Sameer Shalaby
      Commentary: Why should investors care about treasury management?
      David Blitzstein
      Commentary: Without a national retirement policy, Americans face a future of pension crises
      Lawrence Cunningham
      Commentary: Gensler should keep Clayton’s pragmatic proxy adviser rules
      My-Linh Ngo
      Commentary: Pension funds and the role of the debt market in the fight against climate change
    • Writer using a typewriter
      OCIO industry needs to adopt GIPS
      Writer or journalist workplace. stock illustration
      Even as it assails China, Trump administration emulates it
      Skeptical of Main Street support for proxy adviser proposal
      Focus on manager diversity pushes asset owners’ to walk the talk
    • P&I Content Solutions
      How will gold react?
      To people shaking hands
      P&I Content Solutions
      Lessons From 2020: Today’s OCIO Model Passes a Major Test of Governance
      Sponsored Content By MassMutual
      Leveraging Data to Manage Risk
      Sponsored Content By iShares
      ETFs are becoming a cornerstone of insurance equity portfolios
    • Help us help you by supporting quality journalism
      You Must Believe in Spring
      Everything Must Change
      Tomatoes & Investments
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Webinars
    • Polls
    • Slideshows
    • Charts / Infographics
    • watch video
      0:45
      Private funds weathered 2020 turmoil
      watch video
      0:59
      Secure choice and other retirement plans at a state level
      watch video
      3:33
      P&I 1,000 by the numbers 2021
      watch video
      1:33
      A look at hiring activity in 2020
    • Emerging Markets: Expanding Investors’ View
      2021: A Fixed Income Odyssey
      ESG Capabilities and Climate Impact Investing
      Technology is the New Oil: The Changing Nature of Emerging Markets
    • POLL: Working after the pandemic
      POLL: The year ahead for the 1,000 largest U.S. retirement funds
      POLL: The Biden administration’s economic plans
      POLL: Retirement issues in 2021
    • view gallery
      9 photos
      Coronavirus and the markets
      view gallery
      22 photos
      The 1,000 largest retirement funds: 2020
      view gallery
      10 photos
      Outlook 2020
      view gallery
      10 photos
      2019 as seen through the eyes of Roger
    • By the Numbers for February 2021
      Top Performing Managers of Global Fixed Income, 4th Quarter 2020
      Top Performing Managers of International Equity, 4th Quarter 2020
      Top Performing Managers of Managed Domestic Broad-Market Fixed Income, 4th Quarter 2020
  • Events
    • Conferences
    • Webinars
    • Defined Contribution Spring Virtual Series
      DC Investment Lineup Virtual Series
      ESG Investing Virtual Series
      Private Markets Virtual Series
    • Emerging Markets: Expanding Investors’ View
      2021: A Fixed Income Odyssey
      ESG Capabilities and Climate Impact Investing
      Technology is the New Oil: The Changing Nature of Emerging Markets
  • Careers
  • Research Center
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. INVESTING & PORTFOLIO STRATEGIES
October 09, 2014 01:00 AM

Drug royalties in a real asset portfolio

Christopher M. Schelling
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Reprints Print
    Christopher M. Schelling is deputy chief investment officer, director of absolute return, for the Kentucky Retirement Systems, Frankfort, which has committed approximately $50 million to the drug royalty sector. Mr. Schelling also is an adjunct professor of finance, University of Kentucky.

    The pharmaceutical industry has a strong need to access growth capital for the development and production of blockbuster drugs.

    There are a number of factors that combine to make this capital need an attractive investment opportunity for institutional investors.

    Large pharmaceutical companies have been inefficient with respect to their internal research and discovery engines. And small, specialized biotechnology companies require access to global development and distribution capabilities that they do not have internally, leading to an increased number of licensing partnerships.

    These licensing deals typically include a modest upfront payment, milestones tied to key development successes, and an ongoing percentage of the revenue stream for the approved drug (i.e., royalty payments). Upfront and milestone payments typically do not provide biotechnology companies with enough capital to continue to innovate and build a broad portfolio of new drug candidates. In addition, the royalty payments are still somewhat uncertain and spread out over many years, leading to the need to seek additional capital to pay for ongoing overhead and R&D costs.

    As an alternative to dilutive equity capital, biotechnology companies can sell all or a portion of their ongoing royalty stream(s) for upfront cash to fuel innovation, a transaction referred to as a royalty monetization.

    The capital provider, or royalty purchaser, is thus investing in the future cash flows of the specific drug or therapeutic technology itself, rather than the corporate entity. In this way, drug royalties are merely a specialized form of financing based upon the expected future income stream from a specific asset, not functionally dissimilar to mortgage origination, aircraft leasing or even, to a lesser extent, master limited partnerships. Drug royalties have the additional benefit of being non-correlated with broader debt and equity indexes, because performance is tied to the number of patients suffering from a particular condition rather than the performance of the overall market.

    As investors have realized this, the marketplace for pharmaceutical royalties has grown substantially. Market participants estimate roughly $2.5 billion worth of royalty monetization transactions took place each of the past three years compared with just $200 million in 2003. During this period, public pension plans in particular have become large investors in the space, with the $220 billion Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Toronto, a very notable and high-profile example. This has certainly helped contribute to the credibility and institutionalization of the sector.

    Some of this growth in transaction volume is being driven by a recent increase in the number of drugs being approved, after a period of relatively modest FDA approvals.

    This increase in drug approval and royalty transaction activity comes against a far more explosive backdrop of overall growth in health-care expenditures. According to information from the World Health Organization, total global expenditures on health-care goods and services hit roughly $6.5 trillion as of 2012, up from approximately $3.3 trillion in 2000. More important than the nominal increase, this represents a significant expansion relative to global gross domestic product. When combining private and public expenses, total health-care outlays as a percentage of production globally have risen to 9.1% from 8.2%, an increase that is observed across developed and emerging economies alike.

    Going back to 1995, health-care spending as a percentage of GDP in the U.S. has increased 31% cumulatively, or about 1.6% per annum. Although spending in the U.S. represents a far larger portion of the economy than any other nation, growth in spending on health care is a nearly ubiquitous phenomenon. For example, during this period, China's spending on health care has risen 52.7% while Germany's is up a more modest 11.6%. Interestingly, the average growth rate of health-care expenditures as a percentage of GDP since 1995 for the six largest economies in the world (ex-U.S.) has been 31% cumulative or 1.6% per annum, identical to that of the U.S.

    Even within health care, sales of prescription drugs have risen more rapidly. Global sales of pharmaceuticals alone hit nearly $1 trillion in 2013, almost tripling from $350 billion in 2000. According to information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, prescription drug use across all age groups in the U.S. has risen substantially during the past 20 years. Of note, the increase and overall usage rates have been much higher for those age 65 or older.

    Global demographic trends suggest spending on medical care broadly, as well as prescription drugs specifically, will only continue to increase. The percentage of the population age 65 or older has risen notably in many developed nations in the past 20 years. According to projections from the World Bank and United Nations, the trend is likely to accelerate even further. By the year 2030, many developed nations will see 20% to 30% of their populations fall into this age bracket.

    Participating in the revenue growth of prescription drugs stemming from an aging population can provide a natural hedge against mortality extension risk. The fact that improving access to medical care and prescription drugs provides the population with a longer and healthier life is an unmitigated social good. However, the resulting improvement in mortality assumptions increases the projected benefit obligation of a pension plan as well as explicitly expands current health insurance costs. For an institutional investor that provides pension and insurance benefit plans, an investment that can generate higher returns in precisely those environments makes sense from an asset-liability matching perspective. (This might become even more important with the new mortality tables released in February by the Society of Actuaries. These changes will have the effect of increasing the expected liability for plan participants anywhere from 2.5% to 17.4%).

    Moreover, during this time of increasing medical expenditures, health-care price inflation also has been fairly dramatic. As displayed in Figure 3, the rate of price increase of medical products and services has been nearly twice that of overall inflation for nearly 35 years. It is worth noting again, that even within health-care inflation, prescription drug costs have risen modestly faster. Since 1980, medical care costs have risen 5.1% per year while prescription drug costs have increased at a rate of 5.3%.

    For an inflation-linked or real-return portfolio, exposure to the actual underlying real assets that make up the consumer price index is one way in which to ensure that investment returns have a positive correlation with inflation. Medical care as a whole is the fourth largest major component of CPI. Although prescription drug costs might have a modest weight as a subcomponent within medical care, an asset class that can participate in significant price appreciation that is also mathematically linked to CPI can provide an attractive investment profile for a real-return mandate.

    While the fundamental outlook for drug royalty investments is positive, and the asset class has both theoretical pension liability hedging and mechanical inflation hedging characteristics that make it attractive, it is not without risks. Fortunately, these risks tend to be idiosyncratic in nature, and hence largely mitigable through asset selection and diversification. The biggest risk in royalty monetization is a subsequent collapse in the revenue. Specific to drug royalty payments, there are a number of different causes of potential revenue weakness, some of which might be predicted and some cannot.

    Most of the causes of revenue collapse stem from the introduction of some type of competition, such as generics (price competition) or a new therapeutic technology (efficacy/quality competition), both of which tend to occur with a significant and predicable lead time. However, more unexpected problems can affect drug revenue, for example the development of adverse side effects that take the drug off the market, as was the case for Vioxx. Fortunately, proper asset level due diligence — researching the clinical trial data, analyzing the medical condition, etc. — allows a drug royalty investor to understand and assess the probabilities of these various outcomes.

    Additionally, different types of drugs and therapeutic areas have different types of risks. For example, biological compounds typically have much greater intellectual property, or IP, protection simply because they are much harder to reverse engineer than are small-molecule entities. Also, orphan drugs (those developed to treat specific rare medical conditions) often receive preferential tax treatment, enhanced patent protection and facilitated clinical trials processes through government intervention intended to support the production of these small-market drugs. For instance, the typical Phase III clinical trials requirement of testing 1,000 patients may be reduced by the FDA for a drug intended to treat a condition that has less than 1,000 actually diagnosed individuals in the U.S.

    In addition to detailed intellectual property due diligence, the threat of revenue collapse can also be mitigated through investment structuring, including features such as minimum revenue thresholds, put-backs or make-whole provisions, or adding other explicit debt characteristics to the structure.

    Drug royalty managers capable of performing technical and legal due diligence on the IP, selecting good assets and structuring investments around them, have historically generated net returns to investors in the range of 10% to 12% per year. Notably, given the lack of correlation between royalties and broader debt and equity indexes, the level of return remained consistent through the recent financial crisis.

    If an institutional investor has sufficient liquidity to allocate to 10-year closed-end limited partnerships, drug royalty funds can provide a fairly high probability of double-digit nominal returns with a healthy current income component and potential liability hedging upside characteristics. Maybe not a cure-all for public pensions, but it still sounds like good medicine.

    Christopher M. Schelling is deputy chief investment officer, director of absolute return, for the Kentucky Retirement Systems, Frankfort, which has committed approximately $50 million to the drug royalty sector. Mr. Schelling also is an adjunct professor of finance, University of Kentucky.

    Related Articles
    Institutional investors drawn to health-care sector
    Health-care royalties fund closes at $1.45 billion
    HealthCare Royalty Partners closes 3rd fund at $1.5 billion
    Investors adding real assets for diversification, inflation protection — Greenw…
    University of Wisconsin foundation awarded $234 million from Apple patent infri…
    Recommended for You
    More funds testing water on crypto-related assets
    More funds testing water on crypto-related assets
    Money managers eager to make leap to opportunity zone investing
    Money managers eager to make leap to opportunity zone investing
    Index investing: Not as passive as you might think
    Index investing: Not as passive as you might think
    Lessons From 2020: Today’s OCIO Model Passes a Major Test of Governance
    Sponsored Content: Lessons From 2020: Today’s OCIO Model Passes a Major Test of Governance
    sponsored
    Events
     
     
    Sponsored
    White Papers
    Rethinking Market and Reference Data Management
    Investment Trends: Looking Ahead Across Equity Sectors
    China is embarking on a new stage of growth
    Gold Outlook 2021
    Shifting DC Times - Winter 2021
    GP-LED OPPORTUNITIES AT THE SMALLER END OF THE MARKET
    View More
    Sponsored Content
    Partner Content
    The Industrialization of ESG Investment
    For institutional investors, ETFs can make meeting liquidity needs easier
    Gold: the most effective commodity investment
    2021 Investment Outlook | Investing Beyond the Pandemic: A Reset for Portfolios
    Ten ways retirement plan professionals add value to plan sponsors
    Gold: an efficient hedge
    View More
    E-MAIL NEWSLETTERS

    Sign up and get the best of News delivered straight to your email inbox, free of charge. Choose your news – we will deliver.

    Subscribe Today

    Get access to the news, research and analysis of events affecting the retirement and institutional money management businesses from a worldwide network of reporters and editors.

    Subscribe
    弊社の関連事業
    • RSS
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn

    P&Iのミッション

    "機関投資家向け市場で資金運用を行う経営者に向けてニュース、リサーチ、分析を継続配信すること”

    pilogo-NEW
    About Us

    Main Office
    685 Third Avenue
    Tenth Floor
    New York, NY 10017-4036

    Chicago Office
    150 N. Michigan Ave.
    Chicago, IL 60601

    Contact Us

    Careers at Crain

    About Pensions & Investments

     

    Advertising
    • Media Kit
    • P&I Content Solutions
    • P&I Careers | Post a Job
    • Reprints & Permissions
    Resources
    • Subscribe
    • Newsletters
    • FAQ
    • P&I Research Center
    • Site map
    • Staff Directory
    Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Request
    Pensions & Investments
    Copyright © 1996-2021. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • NEWS
      • Asset owners and the coronavirus
      • Alternatives
      • Consultants
      • Coronavirus
      • Defined Contribution
      • ESG
      • Frontlines
      • Hedge Funds
      • Investing / Portfolio Strategies
      • Money Management
      • Pension Funds
      • People Moves
      • Private Equity
      • Real Estate
      • Searches & Hires News
      • SECURE Act
      • Special Reports
      • WorldPensionSummit
    • Data
      • Research Center
      • Searches & Hires Database
      • Searches & Hires News
      • RFPs
      • Charts / Infographics
      • Sponsored Research
      • Trackers
    • Insights
      • Opinion
      • White Papers
      • Industry Voices
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Partner Content
      • Publisher's Update
    • Multimedia
      • Videos
      • Webinars
      • Polls
      • Slideshows
      • Charts / Infographics
    • Events
      • Conferences
      • Webinars
    • Careers
    • Research Center