Advertisement Navidea Biopharmaceuticals closes $30m loan with Oxford Finance - Pharmaceutical Business review
Pharmaceutical Business review is using cookies

ContinueLearn More
Close

Navidea Biopharmaceuticals closes $30m loan with Oxford Finance

Navidea Biopharmaceuticals, a biopharmaceutical company, has closed a $30m non-dilutive loan transaction with Oxford Finance.

The loan funds will be used to support Lymphoseek commercialization activities, advance the company’s clinical pipeline, accelerate certain development programs, repay certain of the company’s existing outstanding indebtedness and provide for other general corporate purposes.

Navidea believes the Oxford loan provides enhanced working capital with no balance sheet restrictions or covenants, lowers the interest rate and lengthens the interest-only period on the company’s debt, and augments the company’s financial flexibility at a critical time in its growth.

Navidea Biopharmaceuticals CEO Mark Pykett said: "The agreement with Oxford Finance is very timely, providing capital that enables us to continue to pursue important opportunities, first and foremost Lymphoseek growth, and which can be deployed against a number of newer initiatives with our pipeline programs, including accelerated efforts with NAV4694 in patients with mild cognitive impairment and with our Manocept™ platform," stated.

The funding of $30m, which closed on 4 March 2014, is in the form of five-year senior secured term loan facility and bears interest at a coupon rate of 8.50%. The Note includes an initial interest-only period of one year, extendable to three years on achievement of certain milestones. In addition, Navidea issued Oxford warrants for the purchase of 391,000 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $1.92 per share.

In connection with the Oxford financing, the company also announced certain amendments to the Company’s existing line of credit currently in place with Platinum-Montaur Life Sciences that allow this facility to remain in place under its current terms in a subordinated role to the Oxford Note.