The Biotech That Monetizeda Drug Patent Without Selling It
A mid-cap biotech needed $120M to fund two Phase III trials. They had a $400M+ royalty stream from an approved oncology drug — but no way to access it without selling the asset entirely. This is how tokenization gave them a third option.
What You Will Learn
- How a biotech company can monetize a drug patent royalty stream without selling the IP
- The complete deal team: IP holder, tokenization platform, royalty advisor, IP counsel, compliance, investors
- Every phase: structuring the royalty SPV, independent valuation, investor onboarding, token issuance, distributions, secondary market
- How tokenization compares to follow-on equity, Royalty Pharma deals, and royalty-backed debt
- Six practical lessons that apply to any pharmaceutical IP tokenization
01 · About This Case Study
A Hypothetical Deal Built on Real Pharma Royalty Structure
Vantara Therapeutics, its oncology drug, and its investors are illustrative — but every mechanism described here reflects how actual pharmaceutical royalty tokenizations are structured. Royalty Pharma, HealthCare Royalty Partners, and multiple biotech-focused tokenization platforms have executed deals with comparable structures. The deal in this lesson is what happens when those structures are built natively on blockchain infrastructure.
02 · The Deal Team
Meet the Participants
A Nasdaq-listed mid-cap biotech with an FDA-approved oncology drug licensed to three manufacturers. Needs $120M to fund two Phase III programs without diluting equity.
Structures the royalty SPV, deploys the ERC-3643 smart contract, manages the compliance stack, and connects the offering to global investors through regulated channels.
Certifies the NPV of the royalty stream using discounted cash flow analysis across all three licensing territories, with risk adjustments for patent expiry, generic entry, and commercial assumptions.
Confirms the patent is assignable to the SPV, verifies the licensing agreements are enforceable, checks for co-inventor claims, and structures the royalty assignment so Vantara retains the patent itself.
Manages investor identity verification, OFAC/PEP screening, and the accreditation verification program across US, EU, and Singapore investors. Delivers whitelisted wallet addresses for the smart contract registry.
A concentrated institutional base: 12 healthcare-focused family offices, 3 life sciences funds, a Singapore biotech investment vehicle, and 199 individual accredited investors with healthcare sector interest.
03 · The Full Story
From Patent to Payment — The Complete Deal
Two Shots at a Breakthrough — and No Capital to Take Them
Vantara Therapeutics has had a remarkable decade. In 2018, they received FDA approval for VTX-7, an oncology drug targeting a specific mutation profile in non-small cell lung cancer. VTX-7 is licensed to three manufacturers — a major US pharma company, a European mid-cap, and a Japanese specialty pharma firm. The three licensing deals generate combined royalties of $42M per year — a reliable, contractually guaranteed income stream with 13 years of patent life remaining.
On paper, Vantara is in an enviable position. In practice, they have a capital problem. Two pipeline compounds — VTX-12, targeting colorectal cancer, and VTX-19, a combination therapy for treatment-resistant melanoma — are both approaching the clinical data inflection points that justify moving to Phase III. Each Phase III trial will cost $55–65M. Total need: $120M within 9 months.
Their board has rejected three options in succession. A follow-on equity offering would be deeply dilutive at current stock price. A royalty monetization deal with Royalty Pharma came in at a 38% discount to NPV — leaving $80M+ in value on the table. A debt facility secured by the royalty stream carried restrictive covenants that would have limited Vantara's ability to out-license future compounds.
A life sciences banker introduces them to Prime Ledger. The call lasts 90 minutes. By the end, Vantara's CFO is asking for a term sheet.
Designing the Royalty SPV — What Gets Assigned and What Stays
The most critical structural question in any pharma royalty tokenization is the same: what exactly is being sold? Investors must be protected. Vantara must retain as much value as possible. And the two must be cleanly separated.
The answer, after two weeks of legal and commercial negotiation, is a carefully scoped royalty assignment. Vantara does not sell the VTX-7 patent. They do not transfer any rights to the underlying compound. They do not give investors any say in licensing decisions. What they assign to the SPV — and therefore what token holders receive — is a defined, limited economic interest: a right to receive 100% of the royalty income generated by the three existing licensing agreements for a fixed 4-year term.
The Independent Royalty Audit — Proving the Asset Is What It Claims to Be
Investors cannot verify a drug's royalty stream the way they can inspect a building. They cannot walk through the asset. They must rely on disclosed financials, independent certification, and the legal structure protecting them. The due diligence process for pharma royalty tokenizations is therefore more document-intensive than real estate — and more important.
The independent royalty advisor spends three weeks reviewing all three licensing agreements in full, auditing three years of royalty payment records, verifying the patent's expiry date and any pending challenges, modeling the NPV under three scenarios (base, bear, and upside), and producing a 68-page certification report. Their conclusion: the royalty stream has an NPV of $287M on a base case 12% discount rate — validating the $120M raise as representing approximately 42 cents on the dollar of NPV value.
IP counsel confirms the royalty assignment is legally permissible under all three licensing agreements. One agreement required licensor consent — obtained in week 6 after a brief negotiation. No co-inventor claims. No pending patent challenges. No undisclosed encumbrances. The patent is clean.
The PPM risk factors are unusually detailed for this offering — because pharma royalties carry specific risks that real estate does not. The three most material risks disclosed: (1) patent challenge by a generic manufacturer, (2) commercial underperformance relative to royalty projections, and (3) licensor financial distress reducing royalty payments. Each risk is described, quantified where possible, and assigned to the reserve fund structure.
A Healthcare-Specialist Investor Base — More Institutional, Higher Bar
Vantara's deal attracts a different investor profile than a real estate tokenization. The $1,000 minimum keeps the door technically open — but the complexity of the asset and the 186-page PPM self-selects for sophisticated investors. The offering closes to a concentrated institutional base rather than a broad retail-adjacent crowd.
The Singapore vehicle required the most compliance work. As a Reg S investor, their participation required a parallel Reg S offering structure with a separate subscription agreement, English law rider, and confirmation that no directed selling efforts reached US persons through their participation. IP counsel and Prime Ledger's compliance team spent three days on the Singapore structure alone — worth every hour given the $18M commitment.
The Royalty Assignment Executes — The Patent Stays Home
Closing day is simultaneously the most complicated and the most anticlimactic day of the deal. The complicated part happens first: the royalty assignment agreement is executed, transferring the right to collect royalty payments from all three licensees to VTX-7 Royalty LLC for the 4-year term. The three licensees are formally notified and acknowledge the assignment in writing — they will now remit royalty payments to the SPV's escrow account rather than Vantara directly.
The anticlimactic part follows: the smart contract deploys in a single Ethereum transaction. 120,000 VTXR tokens are minted and distributed to 214 wallets in the same block. The $120M in subscription funds is released from escrow to Vantara. The Form D is filed with the SEC. The Reg S filings are made in relevant EU jurisdictions.
Vantara's CFO calls the CEO. The VTX-12 Phase III trial is fully funded. The VTX-19 budget is approved. The company's pipeline — which analysts had been discounting because of the capital uncertainty — now has certainty. Vantara's stock rises 6.4% in after-hours trading when the transaction is announced.
The Royalties Arrive — And Go Straight to 214 Wallets
The first royalty payment arrives in month 3. The US licensee — the largest of the three — remits $9.2M to the SPV escrow account for Q1. The European licensee sends €2.1M (converted to USD: $2.3M). The Japanese licensee sends ¥480M (converted: $3.2M). Total Q1 receipts: $14.7M — slightly above the $10.5M quarterly target.
The smart contract receives the deposit confirmation, deducts Prime Ledger's platform fee ($294,000 = 2%), routes $1.4M to the reserve fund top-up, and distributes the remaining $13.0M across 120,000 tokens — $108.33 per token — simultaneously to all 214 wallets. The distribution completes in 22 seconds.
A family office in Dallas holding 8,000 tokens receives $866,640 in their digital wallet. The Singapore vehicle holding 18,000 tokens receives $1,950,000 — paid directly, no wire transfer, no SWIFT correspondent delays. An individual investor in Berlin holding 500 tokens receives $54,165. All 214 distributions happen in the same blockchain transaction.
Phase III Data — and What It Does to the Token Price
Month 13. The Reg D lock-up expires. VTXR tokens list on the partner ATS. Initial secondary trading is thin — most investors are long-term income investors who have no desire to exit. Trading volume in the first month is modest: approximately $2.1M across 42 transactions. The token price settles around $1,040 — a small premium to issue price reflecting accumulated distributions.
Then, in month 15, Vantara announces that VTX-12 — the colorectal cancer drug funded by this tokenization deal — has achieved statistically significant Phase III results. The news is significant: a successful FDA approval would likely expand VTX-7's commercial reach (VTX-12 targets a related oncology pathway) and improve Vantara's ability to negotiate better royalty terms on future compounds.
VTXR token price jumps to $1,180 on the day of the announcement — a 18% premium to issue price. Secondary market volume triples for three days as investors who want exposure to the VTX-12 upside buy into the royalty stream. The secondary market is functioning exactly as designed: rapidly pricing in new information about the underlying asset's commercial prospects.
By the end of Year 2, VTXR has distributed another $41.8M in royalties. Cumulative distributions now total $80.8M — more than 67 cents returned on every dollar invested, with two years of royalty rights still remaining in the SPV term.
04 · The Outcomes
What Each Party Got From the Deal
05 · The Alternatives Compared
What Vantara Would Have Done Instead — and Why Tokenization Won
| Dimension | Follow-On Equity | Royalty Pharma Deal | Royalty-Backed Debt | Tokenization ✓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital Available | $120M | $180M (but full sale) | $84M (70% advance) | $120M |
| Equity Dilution | ~18% at current price | None | None | Zero dilution |
| Patent Retained? | Yes | No — IP transferred | Yes | Yes — fully retained |
| Future Royalties (Yrs 5–13) | Retained | Lost permanently | Retained | Retained |
| NPV Captured | N/A | 62 cents on dollar | ~30 cents on dollar | ~42 cents — market pricing |
| Time to Capital | 6–10 weeks (SEC review) | 6–18 months | 8–12 weeks | 58 days |
| Covenants / Restrictions | None | None (full sale) | Yes — restrict outlicensing | None |
| Investor Liquidity | Public equity (full liquidity) | N/A (buyer holds) | None | ATS secondary market |
| Stock Price Impact | Dilutive — likely negative | Neutral to positive | Neutral | +6.4% (capital certainty) |
06 · What Made This Deal Work
Six Lessons From the Vantara Royalty Tokenization
Scope the Assignment Precisely — Retain Everything Else
The deal's success depended on a surgically scoped royalty assignment: 4 years, 3 agreements, income right only. The patent, the licensing authority, and years 5–13 of royalties all stayed with Vantara. Sloppy scoping — assigning too broadly — would have transferred value Vantara did not need to sell and created investor rights that interfered with operations.
Independent Valuation Is Not Optional — It Is the Credibility Engine
Without the 68-page independent royalty certification, institutional investors would not have participated. "Trust us" is not a prospectus. A credible, independently produced NPV analysis at $287M made the $120M raise look attractively priced — generating real demand rather than polite interest.
Multi-Currency Royalties Require Pre-Closing Currency Protocol
EUR and JPY royalties must be converted to USD before the smart contract triggers. This requires a defined protocol in the SPV operating agreement: conversion timing, rate source (mid-market Reuters), and who bears conversion cost. Getting this wrong creates investor disputes. Getting it right makes distributions seamless.
The Reserve Fund Built Investor Trust Before It Was Needed
Requiring a 10% reserve fund reduced Year 1 distributions — but it also signaled to sophisticated investors that the structure was conservatively managed. When Q3 royalties came in slightly below forecast due to an inventory timing issue at the Japanese licensee, the reserve fund absorbed the shortfall without affecting investor distributions. Zero complaints.
The "Most Favored Nation" Clause Created a Distribution Asset
Three family offices requesting priority access to Vantara's next tokenization felt like an administrative burden at the time. In hindsight it was the most valuable outcome: a pre-qualified, $50M institutional base for the next offering, acquired at zero marketing cost. Every tokenization deal should end by asking investors if they want early access to the next one.
Secondary Market Price Became a Research Data Point
When VTXR tokens hit $1,180 after the VTX-12 Phase III announcement, it was not just a good day for investors. It was the first publicly visible, real-time pricing signal that the broader pharma royalty market had ever produced for this type of asset. Analysts began using the VTXR secondary price as a reference data point for comparable royalty valuations — creating an entirely new data stream for the sector.
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