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Health
Care Still Vibrant Sector
'Recession-proof' biotech firms are solid
venture-capital candidates, an industry expert says.
By Laurie Winslow
Tulsa World Staff Writer
6-17-2003
William Paiva gets frustrated almost daily when
he reads newspaper accounts about how the economy is in trouble.
He notes that there are some shining
stars worth focusing on in today's marketplace, and the health-care
industry is one of them.
"I truly believe that health care remains to
bring a bright future for Oklahoma," said Paiva, general partner with
Chisholm Private Capital Partners and manager of the Oklahoma Life Sciences
Fund LLC.
Paiva gave
an overview Monday of the biotech industry in Oklahoma and a profile
of the Oklahoma Life Sciences Fund. His presentation was part of the
luncheon series hosted by the Oklahoma Investment Forum at the Downtown
Doubletree Hotel.
The Oklahoma Life Sciences Fund is a limited liability
company created to take advantage of private equity investment opportunities
in the field. The $5.1 million fund invests in the most promising early-stage
life-science companies that are not yet able to attract venture capital.
Health care is a great place for venture capital investing, in part because
it is "recession proof," Paiva said.
"When the economy goes south, people in business
can wait to get high-speed Internet in their office or homes, but if
you get diagnosed with cancer, you're not going to wait a year to start
a (drug treatment) regimen," he said.
Health care represents a $1.3 trillion industry that
is expected to grow to $2.6 trillion by 2010. Among factors contributing
to the industry's growth are an aging population, the need to find ways
to control costs and to address quality-of-life issues, Paiva said.
When Paiva was being hired
to run the fund in 2000, he was cautioned that he would be working
with a modest amount of money in a sector that not a lot of people were
interested in, and in a part of the country that was not known for its
health-care industry.
"I said, 'Sure, why not,'" Paiva recalled,
provoking chuckles from his audience.
The timing happened to be just right because as other
sectors such as information technology started imploding, the health-care
industry subsequently started gaining more attention. The Oklahoma Life
Sciences Fund was started
with the goal of advancing Oklahoma health-care technologies.
As part of its investment criteria, the fund looks at proprietary Oklahoma-based
life science and medical technologies only, Paiva said.
The
fund also looks for areas that have a large, high-growth market potential
and the ability to attract talented management.
Laurie Winslow,
World staff writer, can be reached at 918/581-8466 or via
e-mail at laurie.winslow@tulsaworld.com.
Copyright © 2003, World
Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
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