Temasek-backed Covid-19 test provider Oxford Nanopore seeks £300m in IPO
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DNA-SEQUENCING company Oxford Nanopore Technologies, which counts IP Group and Singapore's Temasek among its shareholders, and whose technology is used to identify variants of Covid-19, is looking to raise £300 million (S$556.4 million) in a London listing on the back of a pandemic boost.
The offering will also include existing shares, the company said in a statement on Thursday.
The spinout from the University of Oxford supplies the UK with tests that use DNA and RNA sequencing to detect various strains of Covid. Its technology was also used during the Ebola and Zika outbreaks.
The company was worth about £2.5 billion during its last funding round in May, based on the valuation that shareholder IP Group assigns to its 14.5 per cent stake.
Oxford Nanopore is opting for a listing on the standard segment of the London Stock Exchange (LSE), meaning it will be ineligible for inclusion into major FTSE benchmarks.
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Oracle has also agreed to subscribe for £150 million of new shares.
The UK company will move its genetic analysis applications to Oracle's cloud-computing architecture as well, it said.
Oxford Nanopore shareholders in June approved a "limited anti-takeover" share structure, according to a registration document filed ahead of the listing.
The special shares, which will be held by chief executive officer Gordon Sanghera, will help block hostile takeovers, but won't confer any other voting rights and will expire after three years.
Several big companies that have gone public in London over the past year - online retailer THG, food-delivery startup Deliveroo and fintech Wise - have done something similar, giving founders a special class of shares with extra voting rights to block an unwanted takeover.
London has been working hard to lure more businesses to its stock exchange, and proposed changes to its listing rules would pave the way for companies with multi-class shares to qualify for a premium quotation, or the top-tier segment of the LSE.
The reforms come as the UK attempts to bolster its financial position post-Brexit and keep fast-growing British companies, especially those operating in the tech and life-sciences sectors, from fleeing to the US in search of more investors and richer valuations.
US gene-sequencing giant Illumina is valued at more than US$70 billion.
Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Barclays Bank, Berenberg, Guggenheim Securities, Numis Securities and RBC are arranging the offering. BLOOMBERG, REUTERS
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