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| x | QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
| o | TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
|
California
|
|
94-3127919
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(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
|
|
(IRS Employer Identification No.)
|
|
Large accelerated filer
|
o
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Accelerated filer
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T
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Non-accelerated filer
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o
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(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
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Smaller reporting company
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o
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| Item 1. | Financial Statements |
|
|
June 30, 2013
(unaudited)
|
December 31,
2012
|
||||||
|
|
|
|
||||||
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
||||||
|
CURRENT ASSETS
|
|
|
||||||
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
$
|
14,306,296
|
$
|
4,349,967
|
||||
|
Inventory
|
64,745
|
55,316
|
||||||
|
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
|
3,760,667
|
2,774,196
|
||||||
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Total current assets
|
18,131,708
|
7,179,479
|
||||||
|
|
||||||||
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Equipment, net
|
1,841,253
|
1,348,554
|
||||||
|
Deferred license and consulting fees
|
600,583
|
669,326
|
||||||
|
Deposits
|
118,576
|
64,442
|
||||||
|
Intangible assets, net
|
19,201,647
|
20,486,792
|
||||||
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TOTAL ASSETS
|
$
|
39,893,767
|
$
|
29,748,593
|
||||
|
|
||||||||
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LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
|
||||||||
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CURRENT LIABILITIES
|
||||||||
|
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
|
$
|
3,972,224
|
$
|
3,989,962
|
||||
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Deferred license and subscription revenue, current portion
|
462,773
|
400,870
|
||||||
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Total current liabilities
|
4,434,997
|
4,390,832
|
||||||
|
|
||||||||
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LONG-TERM LIABILITIES
|
||||||||
|
Deferred license revenue, net of current portion
|
693,242
|
768,678
|
||||||
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Deferred rent, net of current portion
|
47,134
|
57,214
|
||||||
|
Other long-term liabilities
|
201,093
|
237,496
|
||||||
|
Total long-term liabilities
|
941,469
|
1,063,388
|
||||||
|
|
||||||||
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Commitments and contingencies
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
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EQUITY
|
||||||||
|
Preferred Shares, no par value, authorized 2,000,000 and 1,000,000 shares respectively, as of June 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012; none issued
|
||||||||
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Common shares, no par value, authorized 125,000,000 and 75,000,000 shares respectively, as of June 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012; 57,932,220 issued and 55,616,934 outstanding at June 30, 2013 and 51,183,318 issued and 49,383,209 outstanding as of December 31, 2012
|
148,002,896
|
119,821,243
|
||||||
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Contributed capital
|
93,972
|
93,972
|
||||||
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Accumulated other comprehensive income/(loss)
|
117,724
|
(59,570
|
)
|
|||||
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Accumulated deficit
|
(117,178,103
|
)
|
(101,895,712
|
)
|
||||
|
Treasury stock at cost: 2,315,286 and 1,800,109 shares at June 30, 2013 and at December 31, 2012, respectively
|
(10,120,653
|
)
|
(8,375,397
|
)
|
||||
|
Total shareholders' equity
|
20,915,836
|
9,584,536
|
||||||
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Noncontrolling interest
|
13,601,465
|
14,709,837
|
||||||
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Total equity
|
34,517,301
|
24,294,373
|
||||||
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TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
|
$
|
39,893,767
|
$
|
29,748,593
|
||||
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|
Three Months Ended
|
Six Months Ended
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
June 30,
2013
|
June 30,
2012
|
June 30,
2013
|
June 30,
2012
|
||||||||||||
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|
||||||||||||
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REVENUES:
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
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License fees
|
$
|
362,249
|
$
|
175,419
|
$
|
712,078
|
$
|
211,887
|
||||||||
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Royalties from product sales
|
103,315
|
126,455
|
210,914
|
273,857
|
||||||||||||
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Grant income
|
693,480
|
672,537
|
777,293
|
1,074,771
|
||||||||||||
|
Sale of research products
|
57,281
|
59,253
|
124,005
|
127,037
|
||||||||||||
|
Total revenues
|
1,216,325
|
1,033,664
|
1,824,290
|
1,687,552
|
||||||||||||
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|
||||||||||||||||
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Cost of sales
|
(180,811
|
)
|
(83,918
|
)
|
(363,560
|
)
|
(105,497
|
)
|
||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
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Total revenues, net
|
1,035,514
|
949,746
|
1,460,730
|
1,582,055
|
||||||||||||
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|
||||||||||||||||
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EXPENSES:
|
||||||||||||||||
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Research and development
|
(5,530,395
|
)
|
(4,615,436
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)
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(10,975,825
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)
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(8,773,302
|
)
|
||||||||
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General and administrative
|
(3,621,570
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)
|
(2,413,641
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)
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(7,005,091
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)
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(4,802,337
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)
|
||||||||
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Total expenses
|
(9,151,965
|
)
|
(7,029,077
|
)
|
(17,980,916
|
)
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(13,575,639
|
)
|
||||||||
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||||||||||||||||
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Loss from operations
|
(8,116,451
|
)
|
(6,079,331
|
)
|
(16,520,186
|
)
|
(11,993,584
|
)
|
||||||||
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OTHER INCOME/(EXPENSES):
|
||||||||||||||||
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Interest income, net
|
579
|
3,355
|
1,522
|
11,636
|
||||||||||||
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Other income/(expense), net
|
(80,541
|
)
|
85,260
|
(109,520
|
)
|
(240,005
|
)
|
|||||||||
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Gain/(Loss) on sale/write off of equipment
|
800
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(3,546
|
)
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(710
|
)
|
(3,546
|
)
|
|||||||||
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Total other income/(expense), net
|
(79,162
|
)
|
85,069
|
(108,708
|
)
|
(231,915
|
)
|
|||||||||
|
NET LOSS
|
(8,195,613
|
)
|
(5,994,262
|
)
|
(16,628,894
|
)
|
(12,225,499
|
)
|
||||||||
|
Less: Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interest
|
645,848
|
537,040
|
1,346,503
|
1,796,378
|
||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
NET LOSS ATTRIBUTABLE TO BIOTIME, INC.
|
$
|
(7,549,765
|
)
|
$
|
(5,457,222
|
)
|
$
|
(15,282,391
|
)
|
$
|
(10,429,121
|
)
|
||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Foreign currency translation gain (loss)
|
28,857
|
(182,947
|
)
|
177,294
|
(58,859
|
)
|
||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE NET LOSS
|
$
|
(7,520,908
|
)
|
$
|
(5,640,169
|
)
|
$
|
(15,105,097
|
)
|
$
|
(10,487,980
|
)
|
||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
BASIC AND DILUTED LOSS PER COMMON SHARE
|
$
|
(0.14
|
)
|
$
|
(0.11
|
)
|
$
|
(0.29
|
)
|
$
|
(0.21
|
)
|
||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||
|
WEIGHTED AVERAGE NUMBER OF COMMON SHARES OUTSTANDING: BASIC AND DILUTED
|
53,791,434
|
50,548,582
|
52,490,767
|
50,435,272
|
||||||||||||
|
|
Six Months Ended
|
|||||||
|
|
June 30, 2013
|
June 30, 2012
|
||||||
|
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
|
|
|
||||||
|
Net loss attributable to BioTime, Inc.
|
$
|
(15,282,391
|
)
|
$
|
(10,429,121
|
)
|
||
|
Adjustments to reconcile net loss attributable to BioTime, Inc. to net cash used in operating activities:
|
||||||||
|
Depreciation expense
|
253,215
|
183,981
|
||||||
|
Amortization of intangible asset
|
1,285,145
|
1,123,431
|
||||||
|
Amortization of deferred license and royalty revenues
|
(75,914
|
)
|
(75,796
|
)
|
||||
|
Amortization of deferred consulting fees
|
32,559
|
388,124
|
||||||
|
Amortization of deferred license fees
|
54,750
|
87,434
|
||||||
|
Amortization of deferred rent
|
(4,446
|
)
|
(5,427
|
)
|
||||
|
Amortization of deferred grant income
|
–
|
(261,777
|
)
|
|||||
|
Stock-based compensation
|
1,351,795
|
929,257
|
||||||
|
Reduction in receivables from the reversal of revenues
|
–
|
205,004
|
||||||
|
Write-off of security deposit
|
–
|
(3,570
|
)
|
|||||
|
Loss on sale/write off of equipment
|
710
|
3,546
|
||||||
|
Net loss allocable to noncontrolling interest
|
(1,346,503
|
)
|
(1,796,378
|
)
|
||||
|
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
|
||||||||
|
Accounts receivable, net
|
(25,701
|
)
|
(12,156
|
)
|
||||
|
Grant receivable
|
(269,365
|
)
|
359,420
|
|||||
|
Inventory
|
(9,429
|
)
|
(3,844
|
)
|
||||
|
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
|
(414,449
|
)
|
7,195
|
|||||
|
Other long-term assets
|
(5,000
|
)
|
–
|
|||||
|
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
|
(30,865
|
)
|
(373,555
|
)
|
||||
| Deferred revenues | 62,381 | (13,015 | ) | |||||
|
Other long-term liabilities
|
(41,731
|
)
|
(13,462
|
)
|
||||
|
Net cash used in operating activities
|
(14,465,239
|
)
|
(9,674,679
|
)
|
||||
|
|
||||||||
|
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
|
||||||||
|
Purchase of equipment
|
(735,124
|
)
|
(153,490
|
)
|
||||
|
Cash acquired in connection with mergers
|
–
|
292,387
|
||||||
|
Proceeds for the sale of equipment
|
–
|
4,500
|
||||||
|
Security deposit paid
|
(54,423
|
)
|
(526
|
)
|
||||
|
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities
|
(789,547
|
)
|
142,871
|
|||||
|
|
||||||||
|
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
|
||||||||
|
Proceeds from the exercise of stock options from employees
|
–
|
14,800
|
||||||
|
Proceeds from issuance of common shares
|
23,810,421
|
–
|
||||||
|
Financing fees paid upon issuance of common shares
|
(747,907
|
)
|
–
|
|||||
|
Proceeds from sale of treasury shares
|
1,819,500
|
–
|
||||||
|
Proceeds from the sale of common shares of subsidiary
|
255,502
|
–
|
||||||
|
Net cash provided by financing activities
|
25,137,516
|
14,800
|
||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
|
73,599
|
(35,046
|
)
|
|||||
|
|
||||||||
|
NET CHANGE IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS:
|
9,956,329
|
(9,552,054
|
)
|
|||||
|
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
|
4,349,967
|
22,211,897
|
||||||
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
|
$
|
14,306,296
|
$
|
12,659,843
|
||||
|
|
||||||||
|
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
|
||||||||
|
Cash paid during the period for interest
|
$
|
–
|
$
|
255
|
||||
|
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF NON-CASH FINANCING AND INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
|
||||||||
|
Common shares issued as part of merger
|
$
|
–
|
$
|
1,802,684
|
||||
|
Common shares issued for consulting services
|
$
|
148,920
|
$
|
–
|
||||
|
Common shares issued for rent
|
$
|
242,726
|
$
|
–
|
||||
|
Subsidiary
|
BioTime Ownership
|
Country
|
|
ReCyte Therapeutics, Inc. (formerly Embryome Sciences, Inc.)
|
94.8%
|
USA
|
|
OncoCyte Corporation
|
75.3%
|
USA
|
|
OrthoCyte Corporation
|
100%
|
USA
|
|
ES Cell International Pte Ltd.
|
100%
|
Singapore
|
|
BioTime Asia, Limited
|
81%
|
Hong Kong
|
|
Cell Cure Neurosciences Ltd.
|
62.5%
|
Israel
|
|
LifeMap Sciences, Inc.
|
73.2%
|
USA
|
|
LifeMap Sciences, Ltd.
|
(1)
|
Israel
|
|
Asterias Biotherapeutics, Inc.
|
96.7%
(2)
|
USA
|
| (1) | LifeMap Sciences, Ltd. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of LifeMap Sciences, Inc. |
| (2) | BioTime expects that its percentage ownership will be reduced to approximately 71.6% after Asterias issues common stock to BioTime and Geron Corporation pursuant to an Asset Contribution Agreement and sells common stock and warrants to a private investor for cash in a related transaction. See Note 9. |
|
|
June 30, 2013
(unaudited)
|
December 31,
2012
|
||||||
|
Equipment, furniture and fixtures
|
$
|
2,851,456
|
$
|
2,098,812
|
||||
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
(1,010,203
|
)
|
(750,258
|
)
|
||||
|
Equipment, net
|
$
|
1,841,253
|
$
|
1,348,554
|
||||
|
|
June 30, 2013
(unaudited)
|
December 31,
2012
|
||||||
|
Intangible assets
|
$
|
25,702,909
|
$
|
25,702,909
|
||||
|
Accumulated amortization
|
(6,501,262
|
)
|
(5,216,117
|
)
|
||||
|
Intangible assets, net
|
$
|
19,201,647
|
$
|
20,486,792
|
||||
|
Year Ended
|
Deferred License
|
|||
|
December 31,
|
Fees
|
|||
|
2013
|
$
|
54,750
|
||
|
2014
|
109,500
|
|||
|
2015
|
109,500
|
|||
|
2016
|
109,500
|
|||
|
2017
|
109,500
|
|||
|
Thereafter
|
101,333
|
|||
|
Total
|
$
|
594,083
|
||
|
|
June 30, 2013
(unaudited)
|
December 31,
2012
|
||||||
|
Accounts payable
|
$
|
1,687,529
|
$
|
1,168,077
|
||||
|
Accrued bonuses
|
-
|
497,843
|
||||||
|
Other accrued liabilities
|
2,284,695
|
2,324,042
|
||||||
|
|
$
|
3,972,224
|
$
|
3,989,962
|
||||
|
Components of the purchase price:
|
|
|||
|
BioTime common shares
|
$
|
1,802,684
|
||
|
LifeMap Sciences common shares
|
2,501,415
|
|||
|
Total purchase price
|
$
|
4,304,099
|
||
|
|
||||
|
Preliminary allocation of purchase price:
|
||||
|
Assets acquired and liabilities assumed:
|
||||
|
Cash
|
$
|
292,387
|
||
|
Other current assets
|
311,118
|
|||
|
Intangible assets
|
4,273,420
|
|||
|
Current liabilities
|
(294,572
|
)
|
||
|
Cash distributable to sellers
|
(278,254
|
)
|
||
|
Net assets acquired
|
$
|
4,304,099
|
||
|
|
Six Months Ended June 30,
|
|||||||
|
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||
|
|
(Unaudited)
|
(Unaudited)
|
||||||
|
Revenues
|
$
|
1,824,290
|
$
|
1,873,701
|
||||
|
|
||||||||
|
Net loss available to common shareholders
|
$
|
(15,105,097
|
)
|
$
|
(10,326,605
|
)
|
||
|
|
||||||||
|
Net loss per common share – basic and diluted
|
$
|
(0.29
|
)
|
$
|
(0.20
|
)
|
||
| Item 2. | Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
|
Subsidiary
|
Field of Business
|
BioTime
Ownership
|
Country
|
|
ES Cell International Pte Ltd
|
Stem cell products for research, including clinical grade cell lines produced under cGMP
|
100%
|
Singapore
|
|
OncoCyte Corporation
|
Diagnosis and treatment of cancer
|
75.3%
|
USA
|
|
OrthoCyte Corporation
|
Orthopedic diseases, including osteoarthritis
|
100%
|
USA
|
|
Cell Cure Neurosciences Ltd.
|
Age-related macular degeneration
Multiple sclerosis
Parkinson’s disease
|
62.5%
|
Israel
|
|
ReCyte Therapeutics, Inc. (formerly Embryome Sciences, Inc.)
|
Vascular disorders, including cardiovascular-related diseases, vascular injuries, and acquired lymphedema complications of cancer treatment
Stem cell-derived endothelial progenitor cells for research, drug testing, and therapeutics; iPS cell banking
|
94.8%
|
USA
|
|
BioTime Asia, Limited
|
Stem cell products for research
|
81%
|
Hong Kong
|
|
LifeMap Sciences, Inc.
|
Genetic, disease, and stem cell databases; sale of stem cell products for research
|
73.2%
|
USA
|
|
LifeMap Sciences, Ltd.
|
Stem cell database
|
(1)
|
Israel
|
|
Asterias Biotherapeutics, Inc.
|
Research, development and commercialization of human therapeutic products from stem cells
|
96.7%
(2)
|
USA
|
| (1) | LifeMap Sciences, Ltd. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of LifeMap Sciences, Inc. |
| (2) | We expect our percentage ownership will be reduced to approximately 71.6% after Asterias issues common stock to us and Geron pursuant to the Asset Contribution Agreement and sells common stock and warrants to a private investor for cash in a related transaction. See Note 9 to the condensed consolidated interim financial statements. |
|
|
|
Three Months Ended
June 30,
|
Six Months Ended
June 30,
|
||||||||||||||
|
Company
|
Program
|
2013
|
2012
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||||||||
|
BioTime and ESI
|
ACTCellerate
™ hPECs, GMP hES cell lines, and related research products
|
13.5
|
%
|
16.6
|
%
|
13.2
|
%
|
16.3
|
%
|
||||||||
|
BioTime
|
ACTCellerate
™ technology
|
–
|
%
|
2.3
|
%
|
1.8
|
%
|
5.6
|
%
|
||||||||
|
BioTime
|
Hydrogel products and
HyStem
®
research
|
20.6
|
%
|
20.6
|
%
|
21.1
|
%
|
15.9
|
%
|
||||||||
|
OncoCyte
|
Cancer therapy and diagnosis
|
12.6
|
%
|
17.7
|
%
|
12.8
|
%
|
19.1
|
%
|
||||||||
|
OrthoCyte
|
Orthopedic therapy
|
6.3
|
%
|
5.4
|
%
|
5.5
|
%
|
4.8
|
%
|
||||||||
|
ReCyte Therapeutics
|
IPS and vascular therapy
|
5.8
|
%
|
8.8
|
%
|
5.8
|
%
|
7.7
|
%
|
||||||||
|
BioTime
|
Hextend
®
|
0.4
|
%
|
0.9
|
%
|
0.4
|
%
|
2.7
|
%
|
||||||||
|
BioTime Asia
|
Stem cell products for research
|
0.1
|
%
|
1.1
|
%
|
0.1
|
%
|
0.9
|
%
|
||||||||
|
Cell Cure Neurosciences
|
OpRegen
®
,
OpRegen-Plus
®
, and neurological disease therapies
|
18.4
|
%
|
16.1
|
%
|
20.8
|
%
|
18.2
|
%
|
||||||||
|
LifeMap
|
Stem cell database
|
11.7
|
%
|
10.5
|
%
|
11.4
|
%
|
8.8
|
%
|
||||||||
|
Asterias
|
hESC-based cell therapy assets to be acquired from Geron Corporation
|
10.6
|
%
|
–
|
%
|
7.1
|
%
|
–
|
%
|
||||||||
|
|
Three Months Ended
June 30,
|
$ Increase/
|
% Increase/
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
2013
|
2012
|
Decrease
|
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
|
License fees
|
$
|
362,249
|
$
|
175,419
|
$
|
+186,830
|
+107
|
%
|
||||||||
|
Royalties from product sales
|
103,315
|
126,455
|
-23,140
|
-18
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Grant income
|
693,480
|
672,537
|
+20,943
|
+3
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Sales of research products and services
|
57,281
|
59,253
|
-1,972
|
-3
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Total revenues
|
1,216,325
|
1,033,664
|
+182,661
|
+18
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Cost of sales
|
(180,811
|
)
|
(83,918
|
)
|
+96,893
|
+115
|
%
|
|||||||||
|
Total revenues, net
|
1,035,514
|
949,746
|
+85,768
|
+9
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
|
Six Months Ended
June 30,
|
$ Increase/
|
% Increase/
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
2013
|
2012
|
Decrease
|
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
|
License fees
|
$
|
712,078
|
$
|
211,887
|
$
|
+500,191
|
+236
|
%
|
||||||||
|
Royalties from product sales
|
210,914
|
273,857
|
-62,943
|
-23
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Grant income
|
777,293
|
1,074,771
|
-297,478
|
-28
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Sales of research products and services
|
124,005
|
127,037
|
-3,032
|
-2
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Total revenues
|
1,824,290
|
1,687,552
|
+136,738
|
+8
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Cost of sales
|
(363,560
|
)
|
(105,497
|
)
|
+258,063
|
+245
|
%
|
|||||||||
|
Total revenues, net
|
1,460,730
|
1,582,055
|
-121,325
|
-8
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
|
Three Months Ended
June 30,
|
$ Increase/
|
% Increase/
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
2013
|
2012
|
Decrease
|
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
|
Research and development expenses
|
$
|
(5,530,395
|
)
|
$
|
(4,615,436
|
)
|
$
|
+914,959
|
+20
|
%
|
||||||
|
General and administrative expenses
|
(3,621,570
|
)
|
(2,413,641
|
)
|
+1,207,929
|
+50
|
%
|
|||||||||
|
Interest income, net
|
579
|
3,355
|
-2,776
|
-83
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Other (expense)/income, net
|
(80,541
|
)
|
85,260
|
-165,801
|
-194
|
%
|
||||||||||
|
|
Six Months Ended
June 30,
|
$ Increase/
|
% Increase/
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
2013
|
2012
|
Decrease
|
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
|
Research and development expenses
|
$
|
(10,975,825
|
)
|
$
|
(8,773,302
|
)
|
$
|
+2,202,523
|
+25
|
%
|
||||||
|
General and administrative expenses
|
(7,005,091
|
)
|
(4,802,337
|
)
|
+2,202,754
|
+46
|
%
|
|||||||||
|
Interest income, net
|
1,522
|
11,636
|
-10,114
|
-87
|
%
|
|||||||||||
|
Other expense, net
|
(109,520
|
)
|
(240,005
|
)
|
-130,485
|
-54
|
%
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
Six Months Ended
June 30,
|
|||||||
|
Company
|
Program
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||
|
BioTime and ESI
|
ACTCellerate
™ hPECs, GMP hES cell lines, and related research products
|
$
|
1,445,600
|
$
|
1,434,376
|
||||
|
BioTime
|
ACTCellerate
™ technology
|
$
|
199,447
|
$
|
495,850
|
||||
|
BioTime
|
Hydrogel products and
HyStem
®
research
|
$
|
2,312,730
|
$
|
1,392,476
|
||||
|
OncoCyte
|
Cancer therapy and diagnosis
|
$
|
1,406,873
|
$
|
1,672,536
|
||||
|
OrthoCyte
|
Orthopedic therapy
|
$
|
603,438
|
$
|
418,102
|
||||
|
ReCyte Therapeutics
|
IPS and vascular therapy
|
$
|
634,811
|
$
|
676,285
|
||||
|
BioTime
|
Hextend
®
|
$
|
44,163
|
$
|
234,444
|
||||
|
BioTime Asia
|
Stem cell products for research
|
$
|
16,055
|
$
|
83,306
|
||||
|
Cell Cure Neurosciences
|
OpRegen
®
,
OpRegen-Plus
®
, and neurological disease therapies
|
$
|
2,281,952
|
$
|
1,598,142
|
||||
|
LifeMap
|
Stem cell database
|
$
|
1,248,767
|
$
|
767,785
|
||||
|
Asterias
|
hESC-based cell therapy assets to be acquired from Geron Corporation
|
$
|
781,989
|
$
|
–
|
||||
|
|
Principal Payments Due by Period
|
|||||||||||||||
|
Contractual Obligations
(1)
|
Total
|
Less Than
1 Year
|
1-3 Years
|
4-5 Years
|
After
5 Years
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
|
Operating leases
(2)
|
$2,252,613
|
$532,668
|
$1,687,320
|
$32,625
|
$-
|
|||||||||||
| (1) | This table does not include payments to key employees that could arise if they were involuntary terminated or if their employment terminated following a change in control. |
| (2) | Includes the lease of our principal office and laboratory facilities in Alameda, California, and leases of the offices and laboratory facilities of our subsidiaries Asterias, ESI, LifeMap Sciences, and Cell Cure Neurosciences. |
| Item 3. | Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk |
| Item 4. | Controls and Procedures |
| Item 1. | Legal Proceedings. |
| Item 1A. | Risk Factors |
| · | We are attempting to develop new medical products and technologies. |
| · | Many of our experimental products and technologies have not been applied in human medicine and have only been used in laboratory studies in vitro or in animals. These new products and technologies might not prove to be safe and efficacious in the human medical applications for which they were developed. |
| · | The experimentation we are doing is costly, time consuming, and uncertain as to its results. We incurred research and development expenses amounting to $10,975,825 during the six months ended June 30, 2013, and $18,116,688, $13,699,691, and $8,191,314 during the fiscal years ended December 31, 2012, 2011, and 2010, respectively. |
| · | If we are successful in developing a new technology or product, refinement of the new technology or product and definition of the practical applications and limitations of the technology or product may take years and require the expenditure of large sums of money. |
| · | Future clinical trials of new therapeutic products, particularly those products that are regulated as drugs or biological, will be very expensive and will take years to complete. We may not have the financial resources to fund clinical trials on our own and we may have to enter into licensing or collaborative arrangements with larger, well-capitalized pharmaceutical companies in order to bear the cost. Any such arrangements may be dilutive to our ownership or economic interest in the products we develop, and we might have to accept a royalty payment on the sale of the product rather than receiving the gross revenues from product sales. |
| · | Asterias will use the stem cell assets that it will acquire from Geron for the research and development of products for regenerative medicine. Asterias’ research and development efforts will involve substantial expense, including but not limited to hiring additional research and management personnel, and the rent of a new office and research facility that will add to our losses on a consolidated basis for the near future. |
| · | Asterias will become a public company in connection with the completion of the asset contribution transaction under the Asset Contribution Agreement and the distribution of Asterias Series A Common Stock by Geron to its stockholders. As a public company, Asterias will incur costs associated with audits of its financial statements, filing annual, quarterly, and other periodic reports with the SEC, holding annual shareholder meetings, listing its common shares for trading, and public relations and investor relations. These costs will be in addition to those incurred by BioTime for similar purposes. |
| · | As a developer of pharmaceutical products derived from hES or iPS cells, Asterias will face substantially the same kind of risks that affect our business, as well as the risks related to our industry generally |
| · | The success of our business of selling products for use in stem cell research depends on the growth of stem cell research, without which there may be no market or only a very small market for our products and technology. The likelihood that stem cell research will grow depends upon the successful development of stem cell products that can be used to treat disease or injuries in people or that can be used to facilitate the development of other pharmaceutical products. The growth in stem cell research also depends upon the availability of funding through private investment and government research grants. |
| · | There can be no assurance that any safe and efficacious human medical applications will be developed using stem cells or related technology. |
| · | Government-imposed restrictions and religious, moral, and ethical concerns with respect to use of embryos or human embryonic stem (“hES”) cells in research and development could have a material adverse effect on the growth of the stem cell industry, even if research proves that useful medical products can be developed using hES cells. |
| · | Hextend ® is presently the only plasma expander product that we have on the market, and it is being sold only in the U.S. and South Korea. The royalty revenues that we have received from sales of Hextend ® have not been sufficient to pay our operating expenses. This means that we need to successfully develop and market or license additional products and earn additional revenues in sufficient amounts to meet our operating expenses. |
| · | We are also beginning to bring our first stem cell research products to the market, but there is no assurance that we will succeed in generating significant revenues from the sale of those products. |
| · | Sales of Hextend ® have already been adversely impacted by the availability of other products that are commonly used in surgery and trauma care and sell at low prices. |
| · | In order to compete with other products, particularly those that sell at lower prices, our products will have to provide medically significant advantages. |
| · | Physicians and hospitals may be reluctant to try a new product due to the high degree of risk associated with the application of new technologies and products in the field of human medicine. |
| · | Competing products are being manufactured and marketed by established pharmaceutical companies. For example, B. Braun/McGaw presently markets Hespan ® , an artificial plasma volume expander, and Hospira and Baxter International, Inc. manufacture and sell a generic equivalent of Hespan ® . Hospira also markets Voluven ® , a plasma volume expander containing a 6% low molecular weight hydroxyethyl starch in saline solution. |
| · | Competing products for the diagnosis and treatment of cancer are being manufactured and marketed by established pharmaceutical companies, and more cancer diagnostics and therapeutics are being developed by those companies and by other smaller biotechnology companies. Other companies, both large and small, are also working on the development of stem cell based therapies for the same diseases and disorders that are the focus of the research and development programs of our subsidiaries. |
| · | There also is a risk that our competitors may succeed at developing safer or more effective products that could render our products and technologies obsolete or noncompetitive. |
| · | We plan to continue to incur substantial research and product development expenses, largely through our subsidiaries, and we and our subsidiaries will need to raise additional capital to pay operating expenses until we are able to generate sufficient revenues from product sales, royalties, and license fees. |
| · | It is likely that additional sales of equity or debt securities will be required to meet our short-term capital needs, unless we receive substantial revenues from the sale of our new products or we are successful at licensing or sublicensing the technology that we develop or acquire from others and we receive substantial licensing fees and royalties. |
| · | Sales of additional equity securities by us or our subsidiaries could result in the dilution of the interests of present shareholders. |
| · | At June 30, 2013, we had $14,306,296 of cash and cash equivalents on hand. Although we have raised approximately $26,000,000 of equity capital during the six months period ended June 30, 2013, there can be no assurance that we or our subsidiaries will be able to raise additional funds on favorable terms or at all, or that any funds raised will be sufficient to permit us or our subsidiaries to develop and market our products and technology. Unless we and our subsidiaries are able to generate sufficient revenue or raise additional funds when needed, it is likely that we will be unable to continue our planned activities, even if we make progress in our research and development projects. |
| · | We have already curtailed the pace and scope of our plasma volume expander development efforts due to the limited amount of funds available, and we may have to postpone other laboratory research and development work unless our cash resources increase through a growth in revenues or additional equity investment or borrowing. |
| · | We will have to conduct expensive and time-consuming clinical trials of new products. The full cost of conducting and completing clinical trials necessary to obtain FDA and foreign regulatory approval of a new product cannot be presently determined, but could exceed our current financial resources. |
| · | Clinical trials and the regulatory approval process for a pharmaceutical product can take several years to complete. As a result, we will incur the expense and delay inherent in seeking FDA and foreign regulatory approval of new products, even if the results of clinical trials are favorable. |
| · | Data obtained from preclinical and clinical studies is susceptible to varying interpretations that could delay, limit, or prevent regulatory agency approvals. Delays in the regulatory approval process or rejections of an application for approval of a new drug may be encountered as a result of changes in regulatory agency policy. |
| · | Because the therapeutic products we are developing with hES and iPS technology involve the application of new technologies and approaches to medicine, the FDA or foreign regulatory agencies may subject those products to additional or more stringent review than drugs or biologicals derived from other technologies. |
| · | A product that is approved may be subject to restrictions on use. |
| · | The FDA can recall or withdraw approval of a product if problems arise. |
| · | We will face similar regulatory issues in foreign countries. |
| · | delays in securing clinical investigators or trial sites for our clinical trials; |
| · | delays in obtaining Institutional Review Board (“IRB”) and other regulatory approvals to commence a clinical trial; |
| · | slower than anticipated rates of patient recruitment and enrollment, or failing to reach the targeted number of patients due to competition for patients from other trial; |
| · | limited or no availability of coverage, reimbursement and adequate payment from health maintenance organizations and other third party payers for the use of agents used in our clinical trials; |
| · | negative or inconclusive results from clinical trials; |
| · | unforeseen side effects interrupting, delaying or halting clinical trials of our drug candidates and possibly resulting in the FDA or other regulatory authorities denying approval of our drug candidates; |
| · | unforeseen safety issues; |
| · | uncertain dosing issues; |
| · | approval and intro introduction of new therapies or changes in standards of practice or regulatory guidance that render our clinical trial endpoints or the targeting of our proposed indications obsolete; |
| · | inability to monitor patients adequately during or after treatment or problems with investigator or patient compliance with the trial protocols; |
| · | inability to replicate in large controlled studies safety and efficacy data obtained from a limited number of patients in uncontrolled trials; |
| · | inability or unwillingness of medical investigators to follow our clinical protocols; and unavailability of clinical trial supplies certain dosing issues. |
| · | Government-imposed bans or restrictions on the use of embryos or hES cells in research and development in the U.S. and abroad could generally constrain stem cell research, thereby limiting the market and demand for our products. During March 2009, President Obama lifted certain restrictions on federal funding of research involving the use of hES cells, and in accordance with President Obama’s Executive Order, the NIH has adopted new guidelines for determining the eligibility of hES cell lines for use in federally funded research. The central focus of the proposed guidelines is to assure that hES cells used in federally funded research were derived from human embryos that were created for reproductive purposes, were no longer needed for this purpose, and were voluntarily donated for research purposes with the informed written consent of the donors. The hES cells that were derived from embryos created for research purposes rather than reproductive purposes, and other hES cells that were not derived in compliance with the guidelines, are not eligible for use in federally funded research. |
| · | California law requires that stem cell research be conducted under the oversight of a stem cell research oversight committee (“SCRO”). Many kinds of stem cell research, including the derivation of new hES cell lines, may only be conducted in California with the prior written approval of the SCRO. A SCRO could prohibit or impose restrictions on the research that we plan to do. |
| · | The use of hES cells gives rise to religious, moral, and ethical issues regarding the appropriate means of obtaining the cells and the appropriate use and disposal of the cells. These considerations could lead to more restrictive government regulations or could generally constrain stem cell research, thereby limiting the market and demand for our products. |
| · | Our success will depend in part on our ability to obtain and enforce patents and maintain trade secrets in the United States and in other countries. If we are unsuccessful at obtaining and enforcing patents, our competitors could use our technology and create products that compete with our products, without paying license fees or royalties to us. |
| · | The preparation, filing, and prosecution of patent applications can be costly and time consuming. Our limited financial resources may not permit us to pursue patent protection of all of our technology and products throughout the world. |
| · | Even if we are able to obtain issued patents covering our technology or products, we may have to incur substantial legal fees and other expenses to enforce our patent rights in order to protect our technology and products from infringing uses. We may not have the financial resources to finance the litigation required to preserve our patent and trade secret rights. |
| · | We have filed patent applications for technology that we have developed, and we have obtained licenses for a number of patent applications covering technology developed by others, that we believe will be useful in producing new products, and which we believe may be of commercial interest to other companies that may be willing to sublicense the technology for fees or royalty payments. In the future, we may also file additional new patent applications seeking patent protection for new technology or products that we develop ourselves or jointly with others. However, there is no assurance that any of our licensed patent applications, or any patent applications that we have filed or that we may file in the future covering our own technology, either in the United States or abroad, will result in the issuance of patents. |
| · | In Europe, the European Patent Convention prohibits the granting of European patents for inventions that concern “uses of human embryos for industrial or commercial purposes.” The European Patent Office is presently interpreting this prohibition broadly, and is applying it to reject patent claims that pertain to human embryonic stem cells. However, this broad interpretation is being challenged through the European Patent Office appeals system. As a result, we do not yet know whether or to what extent we will be able to obtain patent protection for our human embryonic stem cell technologies in Europe. |
| · | The recent Supreme Court decision in Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, Inc. , will need to be considered in determining whether certain diagnostic methods can be patented, since the Court denied patent protection for the use of a mathematical correlation of the presence of a well-known naturally occurring metabolite as a means of determining proper drug dosage. Our subsidiary OncoCyte is developing PanC-Dx ™ as a cancer diagnostic test, based on the presence of certain genetic markers for a variety of cancers. Because PanC-Dx ™ combines an innovative methodology with newly discovered compositions of matter, we are hopeful that this Supreme Court decision will not preclude the availability of patent protection for OncoCyte’s new product. However, like other developers of diagnostic products, we are evaluating this new Supreme Court decision and new guidelines issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (the “PTO”) for the patenting of products that test for biological substances. |
| · | The preparation and filing of patent applications, and the maintenance of patents that are issued, may require substantial time and money. |
| · | A patent interference proceeding may be instituted with the PTO for patents or applications filed before March 16, 2013 when more than one person files a patent application covering the same technology, or if someone wishes to challenge the validity of an issued patent. At the completion of the interference proceeding, the PTO may determine which competing applicant is entitled to the patent, or whether an issued patent is valid. Patent interference proceedings are complex, highly contested legal proceedings, and the PTO’s decision is subject to appeal. This means that if an interference proceeding arises with respect to any of our patent applications, we may experience significant expenses and delay in obtaining a patent, and if the outcome of the proceeding is unfavorable to us, the patent could be issued to a competitor rather than to us. |
| · | After March 16, 2013 a derivation proceeding may be instituted by the PTO or an inventor alleging that a patent or application was derived from the work of another inventor. |
| · | Post Grant Review under the new America Invents Act will make available after March 16, 2013 opposition-like proceedings in the United States. As with the PTO interference proceedings, Post Grant Review proceedings will be very expensive to contest and can result in significant delays in obtaining patent protection or can result in a denial of a patent application. |
| · | Oppositions to the issuance of patents may be filed under European patent law and the patent laws of certain other countries. As with the PTO interference proceedings, these foreign proceedings can be very expensive to contest and can result in significant delays in obtaining a patent or can result in a denial of a patent application |
| · | We might not be able to obtain any additional patents, and any patents that we do obtain might not be comprehensive enough to provide us with meaningful patent protection. |
| · | There will always be a risk that our competitors might be able to successfully challenge the validity or enforceability of any patent issued to us. |
| · | In addition to interference proceedings, the PTO can re-examine issued patents at the request of a third party seeking to have the patent invalidated. This means that patents owned or licensed by us may be subject to re-examination and may be lost if the outcome of the re-examination is unfavorable to us. As of September 16, 2012 our patents may be subject to inter partes review (replacing the inter partes reexamination proceeding), a proceeding in which a third party can challenge the validity of one of our patents. |
| · | The market price of our shares, like that of the shares of many biotechnology companies, has been highly volatile. |
| · | The price of our shares may rise rapidly in response to certain events, such as the commencement of clinical trials of an experimental new drug, even though the outcome of those trials and the likelihood of ultimate FDA approval remain uncertain. |
| · | Similarly, prices of our shares may fall rapidly in response to certain events such as unfavorable results of clinical trials or a delay or failure to obtain FDA approval. |
| · | The failure of our earnings to meet analysts’ expectations could result in a significant rapid decline in the market price of our common shares. |
| Item 2. | Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds. |
| Item 3. | Default Upon Senior Securities. |
| Item 4. | Mine Safety Disclosures |
| Item 5. | Other Information. |
| Item 6. | Exhibits |
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Exhibit
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Numbers
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Description
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2.1
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Asset Contribution Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., BioTime Acquisition Corporation, and Geron Corporation. (1)
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3.1
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Articles of Incorporation with all amendments. *
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3.2
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By-Laws, As Amended. (3)
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4.1
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Warrant Agreement between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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4.2
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Form of Warrant. (included in Exhibit 4.1)
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4.3
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Form of Warrant Issued June 2013. (5)
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10.1
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Indemnification Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., Broadwood Partners, L.P, and Neal Bradsher. (1)
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10.2
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Indemnification Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., Alfred D. Kingsley, Greenbelt Corp. and Greenway Partners, L.P. (1)
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10.3
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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10.4
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, between BioTime Acquisition Corporation and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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10.5
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Business Park Lease, dated January 7, 2013, between David D. Bohannon Organization and BioTime, Inc. (4)
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10.6
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Stock Purchase Agreement, dated January 7, 2013, between David D. Bohannon Organization and BioTime, Inc. (4)
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10.7
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Amendment of Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated March 7, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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10.8
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated June 3, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and certain investors. *
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10.9
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Option Agreement, dated June 3, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and certain investors. *
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10.10
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Client Referral and Solicitation Agreement, dated April 1, 2013, between BioTime, Inc., LifeMap Sciences, Inc. and OBEX Securities, LLC. (5)
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31
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Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification.*
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32
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Section 1350 Certification.*
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101
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Interactive Data File
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101.INS
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XBRL Instance Document *
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101.SCH
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema *
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101.CAL
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase *
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101.LAB
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase *
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101.PRE
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase *
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101.DEF
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Document *
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| (1) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 8, 2013. |
| (2) | Incorporated by reference to Registration Statement on Form S-1, File Number 33-44549 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 18, 1991, and Amendment No. 1 and Amendment No. 2 thereto filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 6, 1992 and March 7, 1992, respectively. |
| (3) | Incorporated by reference to Registration Statement on Form S-1, File Number 33-48717 and Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 thereto filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 22, 1992, and August 27, 1992, respectively. |
| (4) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2012 |
| (5) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 3, 2013. |
| * | Filed herewith. |
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BIOTIME, INC.
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Date: August 9, 2013
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/s/ Michael D. West
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Michael D. West
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Chief Executive Officer
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Date: August 9, 2013
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/s/ Robert W. Peabody
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Robert W. Peabody
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Chief Financial Officer
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Exhibit
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Numbers
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Description
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2.1
|
Asset Contribution Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., BioTime Acquisition Corporation, and Geron Corporation. (1)
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|
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Articles of Incorporation with all amendments. *
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3.2
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By-Laws, As Amended. (3)
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4.1
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Warrant Agreement between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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4.2
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Form of Warrant. (included in Exhibit 4.1)
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4.3
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Form of Warrant Issued June 2013. (5)
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10.1
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Indemnification Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., Broadwood Partners, L.P, and Neal Bradsher. (1)
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10.2
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Indemnification Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, by and among BioTime, Inc., Alfred D. Kingsley, Greenbelt Corp. and Greenway Partners, L.P. (1)
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10.3
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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10.4
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated January 4, 2013, between BioTime Acquisition Corporation and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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10.5
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Business Park Lease, dated January 7, 2013, between David D. Bohannon Organization and BioTime, Inc. (4)
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10.6
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Stock Purchase Agreement, dated January 7, 2013, between David D. Bohannon Organization and BioTime, Inc. (4)
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10.7
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Amendment of Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated March 7, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and Romulus Films, Ltd. (4)
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Stock and Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated June 3, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and certain investors. *
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Option Agreement, dated June 3, 2013, between BioTime, Inc. and certain investors. *
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10.10
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Client Referral and Solicitation Agreement, dated April 1, 2013, between BioTime, Inc., LifeMap Sciences, Inc. and OBEX Securities, LLC. (5)
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Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification.*
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Section 1350 Certification.*
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101
|
Interactive Data File
|
|
|
|
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101.INS
|
XBRL Instance Document *
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|
|
|
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101.SCH
|
XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema *
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101.CAL
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase *
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101.LAB
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase *
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101.PRE
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase *
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|
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101.DEF
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XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Document *
|
| (1) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 8, 2013. |
| (2) | Incorporated by reference to Registration Statement on Form S-1, File Number 33-44549 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 18, 1991, and Amendment No. 1 and Amendment No. 2 thereto filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 6, 1992 and March 7, 1992, respectively. |
| (3) | Incorporated by reference to Registration Statement on Form S-1, File Number 33-48717 and Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 thereto filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 22, 1992, and August 27, 1992, respectively. |
| (4) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2012 |
| (5) | Incorporated by reference to BioTime’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 3, 2013. |
| * | Filed herewith. |
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
| FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
|---|
| DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
|---|
No information found
No Customers Found
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|