Cash-poor 23andMe considers other strategic alternatives, including a sale. The latest unsurprising development in 23andMe’s story is the admission, by their new board of directors, that 23andMe now does not have enough cash to continue for the next 12 months. They are now considering the following strategic alternatives: a possible sale of the company, business combination, sale of all or part of the Company’s assets, licensing of assets, restructuring, or other strategic action. Leading the search will be a Special Committee composed of three independent directors. Release
This announcement was paired with their 28 January report of Q3 financials that revealed their incredible shrinking liquidity: $79.4 million as of 31 December versus $126.6 million on 30 September (Q2), and $216.5 million on 31 March (Q1). This is after staff layoffs of 40% or more, closing of operations such as drug discovery and therapeutics, offloading real estate, and attempting to find outside funding. The dismal conclusion: “Accordingly, management has determined that there is substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”
Q3 consumer services revenue was only $39.6 million versus prior year’s $42.9 million. There was a last payment from GSK under their now terminated research agreement of $19.3 million. Q3 net loss was $26.8 million. While carrying no debt, their accumulated deficit is $2.4 billion. Release
The new Special Committee is composed of their three independent directors, Mark Jensen, Andre Fernandez, and Jim Frankola. They are also the only board members other than CEO Anne Wojcicki. Meetings should be uncomplicated. Moelis & Company LLC is the financial advisor and Goodwin Procter LLP is the legal advisor. If “Special Committee” and “alternatives” sound familiar, the previous board also formed a Special Committee to investigate alternatives last summer. Wojcicki’s $0.40/share buyout offer (before the reverse stock split) was roundly rejected on 2 August 2024. By September, the seven independent directors resigned rather than continuing with the ” protracted and distracting difference of view with you (Wojcicki) as to the direction of the Company.”
The bottom line: Anne Wojcicki is the decider–no one else. She holds 22.5% of the company’s outstanding Class A common stock and 59.2% of outstanding Class B common stock (according to analyst TD Cowen), reportedly giving her 49.99% of the voting power. Other than Lemonaid, there’s nothing to throw out the hatch to lighten the load [TTA 22 Jan]–and why no one is stepping up to buy a company with a foothold in telehealth remedies including GLP-1 is a mystery. Research partnerships such as Discover23 with Lifebit are slow and limited revenue generators. Their October 2023 data breach lawsuits in the US and Canada are still pending, though in December there was a preliminary conditional approval by the US District Court for Northern California for a $30 million settlement.
This Editor, recalling Wojcicki’s December interview with Gayle King with statements about 23andMe that seemed to emit from an Alternate Universe, and the fact that not only the board but also the operations of the company have shrunk to near-nothing, has concluded that she will close 23andMe’s doors before conceding control–and buy the genetic database out of the bankruptcy.
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