New Rules for Listing Biotech Companies on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange (the Exchange) published its Consultation Conclusions on a Listing Regime for Companies from Emerging and Innovative Sectors on 24 April 2018 (Consultation Conclusions) setting out Listing Rule changes which will allow the listing on the Exchange of two new categories of company – (i) pre-revenue biotech companies and (ii) innovative and high growth issuers which have weighted voting rights (WVR) structures. The new Rules take effect on 30 April 2018 and also create a new secondary listing route for innovative companies with primary listings on Qualifying Exchanges.
The following is a summary of the new Listing Rules relating to Biotech Company listings which highlights changes made from the original proposals set out in the Exchange’s February 2018 Consultation Paper.[1]
For information on the new requirements for listing companies with WVR structures and for secondary listing companies primary listed on Qualifying Exchanges, please see our April newsletter.
- Background
- New Rules for Listing Pre-revenue Biotech Companies
- IntroductionThe Exchange will add new Chapter 18A to the Main Board Listing Rules (LR) for the listing of biotech companies which cannot meet the Main Board’s financial eligibility tests.[4] Guidance on the factors the Exchange will consider in determining listing applicants’ eligibility and suitability for listing under the new rules is set out in a new HKEx Guidance Letter “Suitability for Listing of Biotech Companies” as set out in Appendix II of the Consultation Conclusions (the Biotech Guidance Letter).
- Definition of “Biotech Companies”Biotech Companies are defined as companies primarily engaged in the research and development (R&D), application and commercialisation of Biotech products, processes or technologies. The definition of Biotech is “the application of science and technology to produce commercial products with a medical or other biological application”.
- Listing Requirements3.1 Expected market capitalisationBiotech Companies will be required to have a minimum expected market capitalisation of HK$1.5 billion at listing (LR18A.03(2)).3.2 Suitabality for listingIn addition to the general requirement that the Exchange must consider the listing applicant and its business to be suitable for listing on the Exchange, Biotech companies will need to meet the following requirements set out in the Biotech Guidance Letter, to be considered suitable for listing under new Chapter 18A:
- development of at least one Core Product beyond the concept stage. The Exchange will consider a Core Product to have been developed beyond the concept stage if it has met the developmental milestones specified for the relevant type of product in paragraph 3.3 of the Biotech Guidance Letter.
- primary engagement in R&D for developing its Core Product(s);
- engagement in the R&D of its Core Products for a minimum of 12 months prior to listing (and in the case of a Core Product which is in-licensed or acquired from third parties, the listing applicant must be able to demonstrate R&D progress since the in-licensing acquisition);
- the primary reason for listing must be the raising of finance for R&D to bring its Core Product(s) to commercialisation;
- the applicant must have registered patent(s), patent application(s) and/or intellectual property in relation to its Core Product(s);
- if the applicant is engaged in R&D of pharmaceutical (small molecule drugs) products or biological products, there must be a pipeline of those potential products; and
- prior meaningful third party investment (being more than just a token investment) from at least one sophisticated investor at least six months before the proposed listing, and that investment continuing at listing. In the case of a spin-off listing from a parent company, the Exchange may not insist on compliance with this requirement where the applicant can otherwise demonstrate a reasonable degree of market acceptance for its R&D and Biotech Product.The Exchange will assess on a case-by-case basis whether an investor is a “sophisticated investor” for these purposes by reference to factors such as net assets and assets under management, relevant investment experience, and the investor’s knowledge and expertise in the relevant field. The Biotech Guidance Letter (paragraph 3.2(g)(i)) gives the following as examples of sophisticated investors:
- a dedicated healthcare or Biotech fund or an established fund with a division/department that invests in the biopharmaceutical sector;
- a major pharmaceutical/healthcare company;
- a venture capital fund of a major pharmaceutical/healthcare company; and
- an investor, investment fund or financial institution with minimum assets under management of HK$1 billion (increased from the HK$500,000 originally proposed).
- Enhanced disclosure requirementsBiotech applicants must provide enhanced risk disclosure in listing documents, including information relating to:
- their strategic objectives;
- details of each Core Product, including:
- a description of the Core Product;
- details of any relevant regulatory approval required and/or obtained for each Core Product;
- a summary of material communications with the relevant Competent Authority in relation to its Core Product(s) (unless disclosure is not permitted under applicable laws or regulations, or the directions of the Competent Authority);
- the stage of research and development for each Core Product;
- development details by key stages and its requirements for each Core Product to reach commercialisation, and a general indication of the likely timeframe, if the development is successful, for the product to reach commercialisation;
- all material safety data relating to its Core Product(s), including any serious adverse events;
- a description of the immediate market opportunity of each Core Product if it proceeds to commercialization and any potential increased market opportunity in the future (including a general description of the competition in the potential market);
- details of patent(s) granted, registered and applied for in relation to the Core Product(s) (unless the applicant is able to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Exchange that such disclosure would require the applicant to disclose highly sensitive commercial information) or an appropriate negative statement;
- in the case of a Core Product which is biologics, disclosure of planned capacity and production related technology details; and
- to the extent that any Core Product is in-licensed, a clear statement of the issuer’s material rights and obligations under the applicable licensing agreement;
- a statement that no material unexpected or adverse changes have occurred since the date of issue of the relevant regulatory approval for a Core Product (if any). Any material changes must be prominently disclosed;
- a description of any Approved Products owned by the listing applicant and the length of unexpired patent protection period and details of current and expected market competitors;
- details of the Biotech Company’s R&D experience including:
- details of its operations in laboratory R&D;
- the collective expertise and experience of key management and technical staff; and
- its collaborative development and research agreements;
- details of the relevant experience of the Biotech Company’s directors and senior management in the research and development, manufacturing and commercialisation of Biotech Products;
- the salient terms of any service agreements between the listing applicant and its key management and technical staff;
- measures (if any) that the applicant has in place to retain key management or technical staff (e.g. incentivisation arrangements and/or non-compete clauses), and the safeguards and arrangements that the applicant has in place, in the event of the departure of any of its key management or technical staff;
- a statement of any legal claims or proceedings that may have an influence on its research and development for any Core Product;
- disclosure of specific risks, general risks and dependencies, including:
- potential risks in clinical trials;
- risks associated with the approval process for its Core Product(s); and
- the extent to which its business is dependent on key individuals and the impact of the departure of key management or technical staff on the applicant’s business operations;
- if relevant and material to the Biotech Company’s business operations, information on:
- project risks arising from environmental, social, and health and safety issues;
- compliance with host country laws, regulations and permits, and payments made to host country governments in respect of tax, royalties and other significant payments on a country by country basis;
- its historical experience of dealing with host country laws and practices, including management of differences between national and local practice; and
- its historical experience of dealing with the concerns of local governments and communities on the sites of its research and trials, and relevant management arrangements;
- an estimate of cash operating costs, including costs related to R&D and clinical trials incurred in the development of the Core Products and costs associated with:
- workforce employment;
- direct production costs, including materials (if it has commenced production);
- R&D;
- product marketing (if any);
- non-income taxes, royalties and other governmental charges (if any);
- contingency allowances; and
- any other significant costs.
- if the applicant has obtained an expert technical assessment, that assessment should be included in the listing document where relevant and appropriate; and
- listing documents must include a prominent warning statement in respect of each Core Product that it may not ultimately be successfully developed and marketed.
- Continuing Obligations of Listed Biotech Companies5.1 Financial Report DisclosureBiotech Companies must disclose in their annual and half-year reports details of R&D activities including:
- details of the key stages of each of its Core Products under development to reach commercialisation and a general indication of the likely timeframe for it to reach commercialisation;
- a summary of expenditure incurred on R&D activities; and
- a prominently disclosed warning that a Core Product may not ultimately be successfully developed and marketed.
[1] HKEx. Consultation Paper – A Listing Regime for Companies from Emerging and Innovative Sectors. February 2018.
[2] SCMP. “Hong Kong plans to overtake Nasdaq as listing destination of choice for Chinese biotech firms”. 22 March 2018. http://www.scmp.com/business/money/markets-investing/article/2138478/hong-kong-plans-overtake-nasdaq-listing-destination
[3] https://www.ft.com/content/a6593a06-36e0-11e8-8eee-e06bde01c544
[4]The profits test, market capitalization/revenue/cash flow test or the market capitalization/revenue test under LR8.05.