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Don’t invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. This is a high-risk investment and you are unlikely to be protected if something goes wrong. Take 2 mins to learn more

o2h ventures Makes an Investment in Small Pharma
o2h ventures Makes an Investment in Small Pharma
Jul 18 2019

Funding to enable further investigate an oral antidepressant based on a metabolite of ketamine and a 5HT2A agonist for treatment-resistant depression.
Identify collaborative opportunities with Pharma or larger biotech with assets in which they can deploy the specialist patent expertise developed.
Cambridge, UK, 17th July 2019: The o2h Therapeutics and AI Fund (“The Fund”), an early stage S/EIS fund investing in biotechnology therapeutics and related AI opportunities, is pleased to announce an investment in Small Pharma. The leadership team have experience in both the drug development process and IP, and have looked at difficult to patent treatments for depression.

The Investment will enable Small Pharma to complete further studies for their lead programme which is a metabolite of Ketamine as an oral anti-depressant and to further develop the 5HT2A agonist for the treatment of depression.

Sunil Shah, CEO, o2h ventures, said: “Peter Rands and his team have a wealth of experience in both Patent Law and Drug Development and can provide great value to projects to high-value drugs but are difficult to patent.”

Peter Rands, Managing Director, Small Pharma, added: “We are delighted that o2h ventures have the confidence in us to participate in this financing. Beyond their investment, they bring deep sector experience and an unrivalled network, all of which are critical to advancing our antidepressant candidates into the clinic.”

Editor’s Note:

About o2h ventures:

o2h ventures Limited has launched the o2h Therapeutics and AI fund which is the first S/EIS fund in the UK solely focused on early stage biotech therapeutics and related AI opportunities. The geographic scope shall be UK wide including Oxford and London but will target the growing Cambridge biotech cluster. The Fund is structured to be S/EIS compliant providing tax breaks for UK taxpayers.

The biotech sector is one of the leading sectors in the UK economy. The large pharma companies now rely on the small innovative biotech’s for new ideas in disease areas such as cancer, genomics, anti-ageing and neurosciences amongst others which has led to higher potential exit valuations. The Fund will widen the community of investors that will help expand early stage research in the UK.

The o2h team are leaders in the biotech community and have been actively involved as investors, holding various board/industry positions as well as being engaged in grassroots scientific activity for over 20 years. o2h operate from their proprietary 2.7 acre Mill SciTech Park where they are developing a unique model for incubating small life science companies.

For more information, please visit- https://o2hventures.com/

Media Contact:

Ajit Singh

Public Relations

ajit@o2h.com

About Small Pharma:

Many valuable drug development opportunities, either from academia or from discovery-focused biotech companies, lose their way in development and never reach the patients. Small Pharma is dedicated to identifying these opportunities and ensuring that the value in the underlying pharmaceutical assets is preserved.

The leadership have both experience of drug development and are and patent lawyers and have looked at difficult to patent treatments for depression.

Their lead programme is based on an active metabolite of ketamine, which they are developing as a rapid-acting antidepressant. SPL801B has a different mode of action to ketamine, has a promising safety profile and early studies indicate a lack of dissociative and addictive side effects.

For more information, please visit- http://www.smallpharma.co.uk/

Media Contact:

Peter Rands

Managing Director

peter.rands@smallpharma.co.uk

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Please refer to the relevant fund’s full risk warnings contained in their Information Memorandums.
Your capital is at risk. Investing in early stage businesses involves risks, including illiquidity, lack of dividends, loss of investment and dilution, and it should be done only as part of a diversified portfolio. o2h Ventures’ funds are targeted exclusively at sophisticated or high net worth investors who understand these risks and make their own investment decisions. Tax relief depends on an individual’s circumstances and may change in the future. In addition, the availability of tax relief depends on the company invested in maintaining its qualifying status. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. You should not rely on any past performance as a guarantee of future investment performance.
o2h Ventures Limited is regulated and authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 812245). Capital at risk, only suitable for high net worth and sophisticated investors.
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Risk Information

Due to the potential for losses, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) considers this investment to be high risk

What are the key risks?

1 – You could lose all the money you invest

• If the business you invest in fails, you are likely to lose 100% of the money you invest. Most start-up businesses fail.

2 – You are unlikely to be protected if something goes wrong

• Protection from the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), in relation to claims against failed regulated firms, does not cover poor investment performance. Try the FSCS investment protection checker here. (https://www.fscs.org.uk/check/investment-protection-checker)

• Protection from the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) does not cover poor investment performance. If you have a complaint against an FCA-regulated firm, FOS may be able to consider it. Learn more about FOS protection here. (https://www.financial-ombudsman.org.uk/consumers)

3 – You won’t get your money back quickly

• Even if the business you invest in is successful, it may take several years to get your money back. You are unlikely to be able to sell your investment early.

• The most likely way to get your money back is if the business is bought by another business or lists its shares on an exchange such as the London Stock Exchange. These events are not common.

• If you are investing in a start-up business, you should not expect to get your money back through dividends. Start-up businesses rarely pay these.

4 – Don’t put all your eggs in one basket

• Putting all your money into a single business or type of investment for example, is risky. Spreading your money across different investments makes you less dependent on any one to do well.

• A good rule of thumb is not to invest more than 10% of your money in high-risk investments (https://www.fca.org.uk/investsmart/5-questions-ask-you-invest)

5 – The value of your investment can be reduced

• The percentage of the business that you own will decrease if the business issues more shares. This could mean that the value of your investment reduces, depending on how much the business grows. Most start-up businesses issue multiple rounds of shares.

• These new shares could have addition rights that your shares don’t have, such as the right to receive a fixed dividend, which could further reduce your chances of getting a return on your investment.

If you are interested in learning more about how to protect yourself, visit the FCA’s website here (https://www.fca.org.uk/investsmart)