BBA focuses on the biotechnology sector and been noted for its strong returns.
Yale University’s charitable foundation had $274 million invested with BBA in 2009 and by 2016 it rose to $1.08 billion, a combination of new money and profits of $393 million. In October 2019, BBA's investment value in two weeks increased by $1.4 billion due to
Seagen and
BeiGene. In August 2024,
The Wall Street Journal reported that BBA's 25% stake investment in Seagen in 2003 resulted in a
windfall gain of $8 billion when in 2023,
Pfizer acquired Seagen for $43 billion which was considered one of the largest
return on capital investments in the industry. Most of those gains were returned back to investors because it didn't see enough opportunities to deploy all that money at once. BBA's success has been built on advances in the science of
genetics, rise in biotechnology stocks and a period of dealmaking as large
biopharmaceutical companies acquire up smaller innovators. BBA relies on talented executives and scientists which are often discovered at companies it invests in and frequently end up on the
board of directors in other companies in BBA's portfolio. As of 2019, BBA's top 20 disclosed public company investments eight have at least one board member who are BBA employees. Chief executives for 7 of those 20 companies also serve as board members for other companies that are BBA investments. Some welcome BBA's influence such as
Eve Slater who has stated the representatives are "very scientifically driven" and "active". Others are more critical of BBA's influence such as
RA Capital Management who felt BBA's influence in a now-rejected deal to merge
BioCryst Pharmaceuticals with Idera Pharmaceuticals significantly favoured BBA at the expense of other shareholders. == References ==