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| SCHEDULE 14A | ||
| (Rule 14a-101) | ||
| INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION | ||
| Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 | ||
| Filed by the Registrant ☒ | |||||
| Filed by a Party other than the Registrant ☐ | |||||
| Check the appropriate box: | |||||
| ☐ | Preliminary Proxy Statement | ||||
| ☐ | Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | ||||
| ☒ | Definitive Proxy Statement | ||||
| ☐ | Definitive Additional Materials | ||||
| ☐ | Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12 | ||||
| Recursion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | ||
| (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) | ||
| (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant) | ||
| Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box): | |||||
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|
A Letter from Our
Co-Founder and CEO
Dear Investor,
Last spring, I wrote our first public letter to shareholders as part of our IPO prospectus. In that letter I aimed to introduce you to Recursion by explaining our mission, our vision and by giving you a sense of the kind of company we strive to build.
Here, in our first annual shareholder letter, and in each annual shareholder letter going forward, I will lay out for you as transparently as possible the key achievements and challenges we faced over the prior year. In addition, I will also lay out many of the most critical questions and areas of strategic interest for us looking forward. While perhaps uncommon today, I feel that candor is a critical ingredient in achieving our mission. We are in the earliest innings of what I believe will be a fundamental transformation of the biopharma industry in the coming decades. We will be aggressive in our aim to lead this shift and we will undoubtedly have both successes and failures. With transparency, I hope to create long-term trust between us and our shareholders, as well as to maximize the proportion of like-minded, long-term investors in our shareholder base. You should know what kind of company we are today and aim to become in the future as you consider joining or continuing to be a part of our mission as a shareholder.
Now that the purpose of this letter is clear, and an expectation for transparency has been established, let me share with you how we grew as a company in 2021, what we accomplished, what challenges we faced, and what we are focused on in 2022 and beyond.
|
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|
2021 – The Year of the Map
|
When we founded Recursion in 2013, we had a few key hypotheses including:
a.
Images, combined with sophisticated computational approaches, could give rise to a new kind of -omics that would be less expensive, more scalable and somewhat orthogonal to previously established high-dimensional datasets.
b.
In biology, structure suits function, and as such the new image-based omics we were establishing (
phenomics
) could be useful in building scalable models of not just the
what
of biology, but also the
how
.
c.
If the two hypotheses above are true, and if we could both scale and create relatability of data across time and between experiments, then we could
build a map of biology
and
navigate that map
to discover new medicines with less bias, more speed and more scale, ultimately industrializing drug discovery.
In the years since, we convinced ourselves (and our partners, investors and other stakeholders) that the first two hypotheses were likely to be true. Fast forward to mid-2020, with tens of millions of experiments and several petabytes of proprietary phenomics data in our hands, it felt like we were on the precipice of making an early judgment about our third and most critical founding hypothesis. Using data from a small subset of CRISPR-based gene knockout and small molecule profiling experiments, we built our first real map of biology in which we used machine learning and AI to predict how any two tested genes or molecules might interact with each other, even without physically testing them together. This was a seminal moment for Recursion - if we could predict whether different actions on biology (e.g. a gene knockout, addition of a protein or a small molecule) might interact with other actions on biology without testing all possible combinations, we could scale our exploration exponentially; the results of a set of physical experiments that might take 1,000 years to conduct using our previous approach could now be predicted after just a few months worth of data generation, and the best of those predictions could potentially be navigated to new medicines.
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|
In the late fall of 2020, we started reading out the first validation experiments from predictions made from our map. In some cases these experiments were conducted in animal models after
just a prediction of a novel relationship in our nascent map of biology
. While many validatory experiments failed, many were also successful - many more than would be successful by chance - and the scale of hypotheses that we could identify and explore seemed to have improved notably. In a variety of animal models in oncology, for example, we demonstrated several new potential mechanisms which generated complete responses, and in some cases we had gotten to these results
directly
from a predicted relationship between a novel target and known oncological drivers in our map. This was enough for us to declare 2021 the
Year of the Map
, and we rapidly began shifting internal discovery capabilities from our previous brute-force search approach (try all possible combinations of potential drugs against each disease model) to our new approach of
mapping and navigating biology
.
As a result, in 2021, our teams were spending as much time learning
how to map and navigate biology
as they were launching and advancing new programs. As a larger number of programs reached more advanced stages of pre-clinical development, we were bandwidth constrained across several key teams. As a result, our pipeline grew and advanced only marginally during 2021. However, the investments made in new people, processes, and approaches in 2021 have prepared us to execute against many new and existing programs in our internal and partnered pipelines in 2022. These advances laid the groundwork for 2022, the
Year of Maps to Medicines
.
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|
Map-Based Partnering
Strategic Partners
|
While the first use case for our mapping and navigating technology was to support our internal pipeline, the sheer scale enabled by this approach also expanded the universe of potential collaborations we could deliver against. The first such deployment of our mapping and navigating technology would actually be an addition to our ongoing work with Bayer.
In September of 2020, when we signed our partnership with Bayer to attempt to initiate more than 10 new programs in fibrosis, our new approach to mapping and navigating biology had barely taken root within Recursion. Over the first year of that collaboration, with multiple programs advancing simultaneously and a strong relationship between our teams, we approached Bayer about the opportunity to expand our partnership, both in terms of the number of programs we might initiate and the potential to apply our new mapping and navigating tools to explore the interaction space of biology and chemistry more rapidly and broadly. In December of 2021, we announced an expansion of the partnership to more than a dozen programs, but perhaps more notably, the expansion of our partnership included for the first time the use of our map-based approach as an option by which we could prioritize new programs with our colleagues at Bayer. We are excited to be well on our way to mapping Bayer’s compound library and are already identifying map-based relationships that we think will be of interest to our colleagues there.
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|
Bayer
Roche/Genentech
|
Furthermore, as we entered 2021 and thought about the power of our map-based approach, we wanted to deploy it against some of the toughest areas of biology where traditional approaches have struggled the most. Neuroscience was just such a space, and in December we also announced a transformative partnership with Roche and Genentech in neuroscience and one indication in oncology. Rather than approach neuroscience and this oncology indication with a specific set of hypotheses informed by the literature, over the coming years we will build maps of biology across the genome and hundreds of thousands of small molecules. | |||||||
|
Our aim together is to explore up to 40 new medicines across neuroscience and this single oncology indication using these maps. What’s more, our colleagues at Roche and Genentech will be contributing single-cell sequencing datasets to the efforts and they will collaborate with us to use these and our datasets to build new multi-modal maps of biology that we together hope will provide even better fidelity, resolution and translational potential. This partnership represents not only one of the largest exploratory scientific collaborations in biopharma history, but also the potential for critical revenue for Recursion with $150M upfront, milestones for map-building and data-sharing that could exceed $500M, research, development, commercialization and net sales milestones on up to 40 programs that could exceed $300M per program and mid- to high-single digit tiered royalties on net sales for products commercialized from this work together. We are thrilled by the progress to date between our teams and look forward to pioneering new approaches together.
Moving forward, we will continue to pursue a limited number of strategic partnerships in areas of biology, as we have done in fibrosis and neuroscience, where we believe the deep expertise and resources of our partners will be critical for success. We will not be in a rush to sign such partnerships, however; we will focus on those that provide an opportunity for us and our partner to bring new medicines to patients in ways we or they might not be able to do alone.
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| 2021 – a Year of Foundational Building and Strategic Growth |
Our mission is to
Decode Biology to Radically Improve Lives
. It is purposefully audacious, expansive, and impactful. We are capitalizing on the near simultaneous convergence of near exponential improvements in diverse areas of science and technology that will make this the
Century of Biology
. Taking advantage of this opportunity at scale requires both capital and talent.
In the first quarter of 2021, significant work at Recursion was focused on executing a successful initial public offering. In April we raised more than $500M in gross proceeds to significantly expand our resources and protect our mission. The resources of our IPO and our partnerships means that we can invest in extraordinarily talented Recursionauts with a wide variety of backgrounds. In 2021, we more than doubled the size of our team to approximately 400 employees. The most intense areas of growth were in our clinical development organization as well as across our biology, chemistry, digital chemistry, software engineering, and data science teams. Many of our new employees were hired in anticipation of the significant neuroscience collaboration we signed at the end of the year with Roche and Genentech, and as a result, we were able to make tangible progress against key challenges even before the collaboration officially debuted so that we could hit the ground running at full speed upon the close of the deal
.
The growth of our clinical development team from approximately 4 people at the start of 2021 to more than 30 people at the end of the year was particularly essential to prepare and shepherd multiple clinical programs in our pipeline into phase 2 or phase 2/3 studies, as well as to create the foundation for the systems and processes to begin to guide a growing set of new clinical programs including our C. difficile program and potentially multiple oncology programs and others advancing through the pipeline.
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| In 2021, we more than doubled the size of our team to approximately 400 employees. | ||||||||
| Growth |
In addition to the growth of our team, our Recursion Data Universe continued to grow, from approximately 6.8 petabytes at the end of 2020 to nearly 13 petabytes at the end of 2021. Perhaps more importantly, the
types
of data in our Data Universe also grew substantially, with the addition or expansion of significant new transcriptomic, proteomic, and invivomic datasets alongside more rigorous digital warehousing of our now broadened bespoke assay data. For the first time, these multi-modal datasets are allowing us to begin to combine our
Maps of Biology
into an
Atlas of Biology
. The number of predicted relationships in our growing maps of biology also grew exponentially from 13 billion to more than 200 billion.
Finally, while we are very efficient with space at Recursion, we expect new laboratory-based technologies and team members to join us in the coming years that required us to make investments to more than double our office and lab space in Salt Lake City, as well as to open small offices in Toronto and Montreal, where we plan to continue the growth of our technology teams. We expect these new facilities, spanning offices to analytical chemistry to biobanking to automated microsynthesis, to be ready for use from mid-2022 through 2023.
|
|||||||
|
6.8
PETABYTES
at the end of 2020
á
13
PETABYTES
at the end of 2021
|
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| 2021 In Review: Challenges |
Operating as a public company is, not surprisingly, more complex than operating as a private company. It brings with it new opportunities, but also new challenges for the organization. Add to this our rapid growth in 2021, moving the entire research enterprise to mapping and navigating biology as well as a smoldering pandemic that necessitated temporarily closing our offices to non-lab workers and it becomes clear that 2021 presented no shortage of challenges for our team. Our team encountered and overcame these challenges with maturity and resilience.
While our culture of caring for each other and our ‘one Recursion’ mindset was a stabilizing force, the single most important shift we made was evolving how we work from a function-first mentality to a project or goal-first mentality. Our new operating model was designed primarily by our President and COO Tina Larson and her team. Though rolling out a new operating model is a challenge, most of our teams have made extraordinary progress in living the principles of the model. While employees still report through their functional managers, who handle career development and partner in motivating and coaching employees, work is primarily prioritized and delivered through one of multiple cross-functional leadership teams focused on specific goals or projects at Recursion. As we continue to tune this new operating model, I believe that we will continue to maximize the likelihood of success for Recursion.
Perhaps the most challenging aspect of 2021 was the simultaneous build of our clinical development team while preparing to launch multiple clinical studies. As we announced recently, we made the decision to delay the start of our GM2 gangliosidosis phase 2 trial to explore a more robust dose optimization experiment in a sheep model of Tay-Sachs disease. This decision was driven by noise in the potency of REC-3599 in experiments conducted in patient-derived fibroblasts that raised the possibility that our planned dosing regimen may not be efficacious in certain patients. While noisiness in patient-derived fibroblast studies is common, because we plan to dose infants in this study, we decided that the right decision was to take a conservative approach and maximize our confidence in dose selection before beginning the trial. Despite this delay, we remain excited about the underlying science discovered using the first generation brute force approach in GM2, and our other trials are set to begin on-time or with only very modest delays. In the face of supply-chain delays and ongoing challenges with SARS-CoV-2 in the healthcare system, we are excited to have already initiated our first phase 2 program in cerebral cavernous malformation, and to be nearing initiation of our NF2 and FAP programs.
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|
We have the resources
to deliver towards
our mission, create
value and grow conscientiously.
|
We try to be aggressive and opportunistic in our growth at Recursion; after all, there is a LOT to build. As a result, in 2021 we explored multiple acquisition targets that would augment or accelerate our mission. Due to the challenges within capital markets at the end of 2021, we were deliberate with our resources and chose not to complete such deals. We also made the decision to slow certain longer-term oriented growth strategies for 2022, such as the creation of Induction Labs, and instead, focus on delivering value through near term (our internal pipeline) and medium term (our collaborations with Bayer and Roche) value drivers. Due to our successful IPO, upfront payment of $150M from the Roche and Genentech collaboration in January 2022 and the potential for further milestone payments from our partnerships in the near and medium term, we have the resources to deliver towards our mission, create value and grow conscientiously. | |||||||
| Key Foci Moving Forward |
Looking beyond 2022 and near-term execution across our pipeline and partnerships, there are two main areas of strategic focus, planning and exploration for us.
First is the continuing evolution and expansion of our Recursion OS to eliminate discovery and translation bottlenecks at scale. Over the past 8.5 years, we have built an extraordinarily capable system for target discovery and hit identification across biology and a growing library of chemical compounds. However, this is just the beginning. Turning our hits into leads and development candidates still requires significant bespoke effort. We are confident that there are many tools we can build or buy to improve this process, but the most critical will be the completion of an iterative cycle of new chemical entity improvements combining digital chemistry with automated microsynthesis capabilities. We have already built a small team and several tools in the digital chemistry space, and we will continue to expand on this work. We have also made very early investment in automated microsynthesis capabilities with key hires, and that team is evaluating the best strategy for building out this compelling capability in the coming years. Success here would enable us to take hits from our platform, prioritize new chemical entities of interest to improve on key properties, and then rather than waiting months for synthesis of those compounds from partners, we could synthesize them onsite in small quantities to immediately test back on the platform. This compressed iterative cycle may allow us to advance new chemical entities much more quickly. In addition, we could significantly expand our early predictive ADMET capabilities in this space, further improving our ability to bring new medicines forward at scale.
The second key area of longer term focus is the evaluation of our business model; as we lead the growing pharmatech sector, the optimal model for growing businesses like ours and delivering value to patients is still uncertain. There are two distinct categories of strategy here: i) a vertically-integrated technology-first biopharma company spanning discovery through commercialization or ii) a discovery-focused entity deeply embedded as the research engine for many larger biopharmaceutical companies across our industry. There are opportunities and challenges in both strategies, and the decision depends not only on where we can best deliver, but also on the pace of adoption of technologies across the competitive landscape of large pharmaceutical companies. The significant increase in deal value for technology-enabled discovery companies over the last two years demonstrates how the most progressive large biopharma companies are beginning to appreciate techniques and technologies such as those we have built into the Recursion OS. However, wholly-owned clinical assets remain the currency of our industry, and we see the shift of many technology-enabled drug discovery companies towards building their own pipeline in response.
|
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| Recursion OS | ||||||||
|
5
IND-ENABLING AND CLINICAL STAGE PROGRAMS
as of 3/31/2022
>200B
INFERRED BIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS
to mine using our maps of biology
|
||||||||
| Therapeutic Areas |
Recursion today is hedged with both a significant internal pipeline, focused primarily on highly partnerable (e.g., oncology) or capital-efficient disease areas (e.g., rare disease), as well as significant research collaborations with large pharma companies in resource-intensive and intractable areas of biology (neuroscience and fibrosis). We will continue gathering input, both on our own ability to deliver a competitive advantage beyond discovery and translation, and on how the industry is evolving, before starting to narrow our approach towards one or the other strategy.
Despite the tensions in the world in 2021 and early 2022, I am confident that we have built a team, a technology, and a strategy that will help to redefine the idea of what a 21st century biopharma company looks like. We have asked every Recursionaut, myself included, to grow in their skills and thinking, such that we can continue to improve our level of value creation year over year. We will continue to operate the company with a long-term horizon, cognizant of the challenges of quarterly thinking that can creep into companies in the public market, but also recognizing the need for us to demonstrate equal parts discipline and delivery to go alongside our innovative thinking. Thank you for being a partner on our journey to bring more and better medicines to patients faster; together, we can
decode biology to radically improve lives
.
Thank you,
Chris Gibson, Ph.D.
Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer
|
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|
Oncology
Rare Disease
Neuroscience
Fibrosis
Inflammation and Immunology
|
||||||||
| I am confident that we have built a team, a technology, and a strategy that will help to redefine the idea of what a 21st century biopharma company looks like. | ||||||||
|
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|
Notice of 2022 Annual
Meeting of Stockholders
To be held June 14, 2022
|
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| Date |
We are pleased to notify you that the 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Recursion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (the “
Annual Meeting
”), will be held online on June 14, 2022 at 12:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time in a virtual meeting at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RXRX2022
. You will be able to attend the meeting online, vote electronically and submit questions by registering at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RXRX2022
15 minutes prior to the meeting start time of 12:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time.
Our Board has fixed the Stockholders of record date at the close of business on April 18, 2022. Stockholders as of the record date, are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement of the Annual Meeting. You will not be able to attend the 2022 Annual Meeting in person.
We are pleased to comply with the Securities and Exchange Commission rules that allow companies to distribute their proxy materials over the Internet under the “notice and access” approach. As a result, we are mailing to our stockholders a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, or Notice of Availability, instead of a paper copy of our proxy materials and our Annual Report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021, or the 2021 Annual Report. We plan to mail the Notice of Availability on or about April 28, 2022, and it contains instructions on how to access those documents and to cast your vote over the Internet. This process allows us to provide our stockholders with the information they need on a more timely basis, while reducing the environmental impact and lowering the costs of printing and distributing our proxy materials. If you would like to receive a printed copy of our Annual Report, please follow the instruction of the Notice Card provided herein or contact us at
Investor@Recursion.com
or using the information on our investor relation website at
https://ir.recursion.com
.
By order of the Board of Directors,
Chris Gibson, PhD.
Chief Executive Officer and Director
Your vote is important
.
Whether or not you are able to virtually attend the Annual Meeting and vote your shares online during the meeting, it is important that your shares be represented. To ensure that your vote is recorded promptly, please vote as soon as possible, even if you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, by submitting your proxy over the Internet or by telephone as described in the instructions included in the Notice of Availability or by signing, dating and returning the proxy card no later June 13, 2022.
Please note, however, that if your shares are held on your behalf by a brokerage firm, bank, or other nominee and you wish to vote at the Annual Meeting, you must obtain a proxy issued in your name from that nominee.
|
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| June 14, 2022 | |||||||||||||||||
| Time | |||||||||||||||||
| 12:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME | |||||||||||||||||
| Place | |||||||||||||||||
|
VIRTUAL MEETING, WHICH WILL BE CONDUCTED VIA LIVE WEBCAST at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/RXRX2022
|
|||||||||||||||||
| The purpose of the Annual Meeting is the following: | |||||||||||||||||
|
TO ELECT
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
three Class I directors to our Board of Directors, to serve until the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders and until his or her successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until his or her earliest death, resignation or removal;
|
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|
TO RATIFY
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2022; and
|
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|
TO TRANSACT
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
any other business properly brought before the Annual Meeting or any continuation, adjournments, or postponements thereof.
|
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|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | i
|
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|
Table of Contents
|
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|
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| Proposal | Description | Board Recommendation | Page Reference | |||||||||||
| FOR | ||||||||||||||
| FOR | ||||||||||||||
| How to Vote |
ABOUT RECURSION
Recursion is the clinical-stage biotechnology company industrializing drug discovery by decoding biology. Enabling its mission is the Recursion Operating System, a platform built across diverse technologies that continuously expands one of the world's largest proprietary biological and chemical datasets, the Recursion Data Universe. Recursion leverages sophisticated machine-learning algorithms to distill from its dataset the Recursion Map, a collection of hundreds of billions of searchable relationships across biology and chemistry unconstrained by human bias. By commanding massive experimental scale — up to millions of wet lab experiments weekly — and massive computational scale — owning and operating one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world, Recursion is uniting technology, biology and chemistry to advance the future of medicine.
The Company is proudly headquartered in Salt Lake City, where it is a founding member of BioHive, the Utah life sciences industry collective. Recursion also has offices in Toronto, Montréal and the San Francisco Bay Area.
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BY INTERNET
|
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|
www.proxyvote.com
.
Use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions any time prior to 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on June 13, 2022. Have the Notice or your proxy card in hand when you access the website. Follow the steps outlined on the secured website.
|
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BY PHONE
|
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|
If your a direct stockholder, use a touch tone phone by calling the toll-free number 1-800-690-6903 to transmit your voting instructions any time prior to 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on June 13, 2021. Have the Notice or your proxy card in hand when you access the phone number. Follow the steps outlined on the phone line. 1-800-454-8683
|
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|
BY MAIL
|
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|
If you requested and received a proxy card by mail, mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the postage-paid envelope we will provide or mail it to
Vote Processing, c/o Broadridge,
51 Mercedes Way,
Edgewood, NY 11717.
|
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| Operating Highlights | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5
IND-ENABLING AND CLINICAL STAGE PROGRAMS
as of 3/31/2022
|
>200B
INFERRED BIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS
to mine using our maps of biology
|
450+
TEAM MEMBERS
as of 3/31/2022
|
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|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 1
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2 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
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1
To elect
Class I Directors: Zachary Bogue, Zavain Dar, and Robert Hershberg;
|
2
To ratify
the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for our fiscal year ending December 31, 2022; and
|
3
To transact
such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any continuations, adjournments, and postponements thereof.
|
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|
VOTE BY INTERNET
www.proxyvote.com
. Use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on June 13, 2022. Have the Notice or your proxy card in hand when you access the website. Follow the steps outlined on the secured website.
|
VOTE BY MAIL
If you requested and received a proxy card by mail, mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the postage-paid envelope we will provide or mail it to Vote Processing, c/o Broadridge, 51 Mercedes Way, Edgewood, NY 11717.
|
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|
VOTE BY PHONE
Use a touch tone phone by calling the toll-free number 1-800-690-6903 to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on June 13, 2022. Have the Notice or your proxy card in hand when you access the phone number. Follow the steps outlined on the phone line.
|
VOTE BY REMOTE COMMUNICATION AT THE VIRTUAL MEETING
See “
Attending the Annual Meeting
,” below.
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2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 3
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4 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
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2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 5
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6 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
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2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 7
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8 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
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2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 9
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10 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
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2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 11
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||
|
CLASS I DIRECTORS
Zachary Bogue, Zavain Dar, and Robert Hershberg, and their terms will expire at
the Annual Meeting;
|
CLASS II DIRECTORS
Terry-Ann Burrell and Christopher
Gibson, and their terms will expire
at the annual meeting of stockholders
to be held in 2023; and
|
CLASS III DIRECTORS
Blake Borgeson, R. Martin Chavez,
and Dean Li, and their terms will
expire at the annual meeting of
stockholders to be held in 2024.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 13
|
||
| Name | Committee Membership | Director Since | Age | |||||||||||||||||
| Zachary Bogue, J.D. | Compensation and Corporate Social Responsibility | 2018 | 46 | |||||||||||||||||
| Zavain Dar | Audit, Nominating and Corporate Governance, Corporate Social Responsibility | 2016 | 33 | |||||||||||||||||
| Robert Hershberg, M.D., Ph.D., | Compensation | 2020 | 58 | |||||||||||||||||
| Zachary Bogue, J.D. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Compensation
Corporate Social Responsibility
DIRECTOR SINCE
2018
AGE
46
|
Zachary Bogue, J.D.
, has served as a member of our Board since August 2018. Mr. Bogue brings to bear two decades of experience in Silicon Valley as an entrepreneur, venture capitalist, attorney, and angel investor. Mr. Bogue co-founded DCVC, and he continues to serve as its Co-Managing Partner. Mr. Bogue led DCVC’s significant investments in Freenome, Planet Labs, Tala, Oklo and Gro Intelligence. Prior to co-founding DCVC, Mr. Bogue was an entrepreneur, founding three companies in Silicon Valley and an angel investor, with early investments in companies like Square, Inc. and Uber Technologies, Inc. In 2015, the World Economic Forum named Mr. Bogue a Young Global Leader in recognition of his leadership at the intersection of transformative technology and urgent global issues, and he is active in the Davos community. Mr. Bogue graduated with honors from Harvard University in Environmental Science and Public Policy and earned his J.D. with honors from Georgetown Law School.
Our Board believes Mr. Bogue is qualified to serve on our Board because of his technical background and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
| Zavain Dar | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Audit
Nominating and Corporate Governance
Corporate Social Responsibility
DIRECTOR SINCE
2016
AGE
33
|
Zavain Dar
has served as a member of our Board since September 2016. Mr. Dar is currently a Venture Partner and former General Partner at Lux Capital, a tech venture firm since October 2014. At Lux, Mr. Dar invests in companies leveraging machine learning and AI to augment and replace physical-world functions including biology, language, manufacturing, and analysis. In addition to leading Lux’s investment in Recursion, Mr. Dar has also led Lux’s investments in Primer, Thrive Detect (acquired by Exact Sciences), Creyon Bio, LabGenius, Tempo Automation, Braid Health, RunwayML, and CryptoNumerics (acquired by Snowflake). Additionally, he is a founding investor in Anagenex Therapeutics and an early angel in Zymergen and Tala. Prior, Mr. Dar was a founder and computer scientist. At Discovery Engine (acquired by Twitter) he engineered machine learning and AI systems across a proprietary distributed computing framework to build web-scale ranking algorithms. Mr. Dar has a B.S. in Symbolic Systems and a M.S. in Theoretical Computer Science from Stanford University where he was a researcher in Stanford’s AI Lab and a Lecturer in the Symbolic Systems Department.
Our Board believes Mr. Dar is qualified to serve on our Board because of his technical background and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
|
14 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
|
Robert Hershberg
, M.D., Ph.D.
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Compensation
DIRECTOR SINCE
2020
AGE
58
|
Robert Hershberg, M.D., Ph.D.
, has served as a member of our Board since March 2020. He currently serves as the President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Directors of HilleVax, Inc. He has been a Venture Partner at Frazier Healthcare Partners since March 2020. Formerly, from April 2017 to March 2020, Dr. Hershberg was the executive vice president and head of business development and global alliances at Celgene (acquired by Bristol-Myers Squibb in 2019). He was employed in positions of ascending responsibility at Celgene since joining the company in 2014, including his role as Chief Scientific Officer from January 2016 to March 2020. Before Celgene, he served several roles at VentiRx Pharmaceuticals, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company which he co-founded in 2006 and was Chief Executive Officer from September 2012 until the company’s acquisition by Celgene in February 2017. Dr. Hershberg currently serves on the board of directors of Nanostring Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: NSTG), Adaptive Biotechnology (Nasdaq: ADPT), and Silverback Therapeutics (Nasdaq: SBTX). He is a clinical faculty member at the University of Washington School of Medicine, and he holds a Ph.D. in biology from the University of California, San Diego’s Affiliated Ph.D. program with the Salk Institute and an M.D. and a B.A. from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Our Board believes that Dr. Hershberg is qualified to serve on our Board because of his scientific background, his senior management experience in the pharmaceutical industry, and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
| ü |
The Board of Directors recommends voting
“FOR”
the election of Zachary Bogue, Zavain Dar, and Robert Hershberg as the Class I Directors, to serve for a three-year term ending at the annual meeting of stockholders to be held in 2025.
|
||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 15
|
||
| Name | Committee Membership | Director Since | Age | |||||||||||||||||
| Christopher Gibson, Ph.D. | Corporate Social Responsibility | 2013 | 39 | |||||||||||||||||
| Terry-Ann Burrell, M.B.A. | Audit; Corporate Social Responsibility | 2020 | 45 | |||||||||||||||||
| Blake Borgeson, Ph.D., | Nominating and Corporate Governance; Corporate Social Responsibility | 2013 | 40 | |||||||||||||||||
| R. Martin Chavez, Ph.D. | Audit | 2020 | 58 | |||||||||||||||||
| Dean Y. Li, M.D., Ph.D. | Compensation; Nominating and Corporate Governance | 2013 | 60 | |||||||||||||||||
| Christopher Gibson, Ph.D. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Corporate Social Responsibility
DIRECTOR SINCE
2013
AGE
39
|
Christopher Gibson, Ph.D.
, is our co-founder and Chief Executive Officer. Previously, Dr. Gibson was an M.D./Ph.D. student at the University of Utah. After obtaining his Ph.D., he withdrew from medical school to found Recursion. He has undergraduate degrees in bioengineering (B.S.) and managerial studies (B.A.) from Rice University. He has served as a Founding Chairman of the Board of BioHive (the Utah life science collective and branding effort, composed of therapeutics, diagnostics, medical device and health IT companies, along with the companies that support them and the public sector) since November 2020. He also serves as a Board member of BioUtah (the Utah life science industry association) since January 2019, Board member of the Recursion Foundation (our not-for-profit entity seeking to promote corporate social responsibility) since November 2019, through which he is on the Board of Altitude Lab (an incubator/accelerator focused on creating the next generation of diverse biotech founder in Utah) since July 2020. Dr. Gibson is co-author of more than a dozen peer-reviewed studies in a variety of journals including Nature, Nature Protocols, Circulation, the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Molecular Pharmaceutics, PloS One, and Diabetes.
Our Board believes Dr. Gibson is qualified to serve on our Board because of his scientific and technical background and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
|
16 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Terry-Ann Burrell, M.B.A. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Audit
Corporate Social Responsibility
DIRECTOR SINCE
2020
AGE
45
|
Terry-Ann Burrell, M.B.A.
, has served as a member of our Board since April 2020. Ms. Burrell, a financial industry veteran, has served as Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of Beam Therapeutics since August 2019. Prior to Beam, Ms. Burrell spent 11 years, from May 2008 to August 2019, with J.P. Morgan, most recently as a Managing Director in the healthcare investment banking group from May 2018 to August 2019. There, she had broad coverage across the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries, helping to execute equity and equity linked financings and M&A transactions. She was instrumental in advising clients on transaction considerations, including strategic rationale, valuation and structuring. Prior to J.P. Morgan, Ms. Burrell worked in equity research at Citigroup, where she covered specialty pharmaceuticals and generics. Ms. Burrell holds an M.B.A. from New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business and a A.B. in Social Studies from Harvard University.
Our Board believes Ms. Burrell is qualified to serve on our Board because of her financial expertise and her senior management experience in the biotechnology industry.
|
||||||||||||||||
| Blake Borgeson, Ph.D. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Nominating and Corporate Governance
Corporate Social Responsibility
DIRECTOR SINCE
2013
AGE
40
|
Blake Borgeson, Ph.D.
, a co-founder of the Company, has served as a member of our Board since the company’s founding in November 2013, and served as our Chief Technical Officer from November 2013 to July 2018. Dr. Borgeson earned a B.S. in electrical engineering from Rice University. From 2003 to 2004, Dr. Borgeson worked as software research intern at M.E. Mueller Institute at Bern, Switzerland, researching and building real-time navigation software for surgical procedures at the M.E. Mueller Institute in Bern, Switzerland. From 2005 to 2016, he co-founded an e-commerce company, BuildASign.com. In February 2016, Dr. Borgeson completed a Ph.D. in bioinformatics at UT Austin in February 2016. Dr. Borgeson has served on the board of the Machine Intelligence Research Institute in Berkeley since September 2018, which focuses on doing foundational mathematical research to ensure smarter-than-human artificial intelligence has a positive impact.
Our Board believes Dr. Borgeson is qualified to serve on our Board because of his technical background and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 17
|
||
| R. Martin Chavez, Ph.D. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Audit
DIRECTOR SINCE
2020
AGE
58
|
R. Martin Chavez, Ph.D.
, Chair of our Board, has served as a member of our Board since April 2020. He is a partner and vice chairman of Sixth Street Partners, a global asset manager. From January 2005 to January 2020, he held a variety of senior roles at Goldman Sachs, including Chief Information Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and global co-head of the firm’s Securities Division, and was a member of Goldman’s management committee. Previously, Dr. Chavez was Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Kiodex, acquired by Sungard in 2004, and Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Quorum Software Systems. Dr. Chavez has served as a board member for Banco Santander, S.A. since October 2020. In 2020 and 2021, he served as a board member for Paige, an AI-driven biomedical technology startup, and Sema4, a precision-genomics testing company. Dr. Chavez serves on the Board of Directors of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard since 2022, and the Stanford Medicine Board of Fellows since 2019. He served on the Board of Overseers of Harvard University from 2015 to 2021, and the Board of Trustees of the Institute for Advanced Study since May 2019. He holds an A.B. in Biochemical Sciences and an S.M. in Computer Science from Harvard University, and a Ph.D. in Medical Information Sciences from Stanford University.
Our Board believes Dr. Chavez is qualified to serve on our Board because of his scientific and technical background and his knowledge of and perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
| Dean Y. Li, M.D., Ph.D. | |||||||||||||||||
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP
Compensation
Nominating and Corporate Governance
DIRECTOR SINCE
2013
AGE
60
|
Dean Y. Li, M.D., Ph.D.
, a co-founder of the Company, has served as a member of our Board since its founding in November 2013. Dr. Li has served as Executive Vice President and President, Merck Research Laboratories since January 2021. Dr. Li previously served as Senior Vice President of Discovery Sciences and Translational Medicine, Merck Research Laboratories from November 2018 to December 2020. He joined Merck in February 2017 as Vice President and Head of Translational Medicine. Before joining Merck, Dr. Li was conducting medical research at the University of Utah from July 1994 to March 2017. During his time at the university, he cofounded multiple biotech companies stemming from research from his laboratory, including Recursion, Hydra Biosciences and Navigen Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Li served as the H.A. & Edna Benning Professor of Medicine and Cardiology, the vice-dean of research at the University of Utah Health Science Center, and as the chief scientific officer of University of Utah Health Care. Dr. Li also served as interim CEO of Associated Regional University Pathologists, the nation’s third-largest clinical reference laboratory, from June 2015 to August 2016. Dr. Li trained at Washington University in Saint Louis before moving to the University of Utah to work as a post-doctoral scientist in the laboratory of Mark Keating. Dr. Li holds an M.D. and a Ph.D. from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and a B.S. in Chemistry from The University of Chicago.
Our Board believes Dr. Li is qualified to serve on our Board because of his scientific background, his senior management experience in the pharmaceutical industry, and his knowledge of perspective on the Company.
|
||||||||||||||||
|
18 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Fiscal Year Ending December 31 | ||||||||
| 2021 | 2020 | |||||||
| (in thousands)($) | ||||||||
|
Audit Fees
(1)
|
820 | 1,385 | ||||||
|
Audit – Related Fees
(2)
|
73 | 44 | ||||||
|
Tax Fees
(3)
|
29 | 46 | ||||||
|
All Other Fees
(4)
|
2 | — | ||||||
| Total Fees | 924 | 1,475 | ||||||
|
20 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| ü |
The Board of Directors recommends voting
“FOR”
Proposal No. 2 to ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2022.
|
||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 21
|
||
|
22 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Name | Age | Position | |||||||||||||||
| Christopher Gibson | 39 | Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer | |||||||||||||||
| Ramona Doyle | 63 | Chief Medical Officer | |||||||||||||||
| Tina Marriott Larson | 47 | President and Chief Operating Officer | |||||||||||||||
| Michael Secora | 39 | Chief Financial Officer | |||||||||||||||
| Shafique Virani | 51 | Chief Corporate Development Officer | |||||||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 23
|
||
|
24 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Name and Principal Position | Year |
Salary
($) |
Bonus
(1)
|
Option
Awards
($)
(2)
|
Non- Equity Incentive Plan Compensation
($)
(3)
|
All Other Compensation
($) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Christopher Gibson,
Chief Executive Officer
|
2020 | 269,643 | 13,000 | 2,268,661 | 20,444 |
12,700
(4)
|
2,584,448 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 485,417 | — | 175,000 |
13,174
(5)
|
673,591 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Ramona Doyle,
Chief Medical Officer
(6)
|
2020 | 3,666 | 1,134,331 | — | — | 1,137,997 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 440,282 | — | 154,000 |
13,174
(5)
|
607,456 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Tina Marriott Larson,
Chief Operating Officer and President
|
2020 | 408,192 | 13,000 | 226,866 | 30,070 |
12,700
(4)
|
690,828 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 428,771 | — | 154,000 |
13,174
(5)
|
595,945 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Michael Secora,
Chief Financial Officer
(6)
|
2020 | 170,833 | 63,000 | 3,431,798 | 15,357 |
37,500
(7)
|
3,718,488 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 307,708 | 63,460 | — | 126,000 |
13,174
(5)
|
510,342 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Shafique Virani,
Chief Corporate Development Office
(7)
|
2020 | 413,541 | 13,000 | 991,749 | 28,158 |
20,523
(8)
|
1,466,974 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 | 500,000 | — | 175,000 |
13,174
(5)
|
688,174 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 25
|
||
| Executive Name | Stock Option Bonus Value ($) | Restricted Stock Bonus Value ($) | ||||||
| Christopher Gibson | 43,750 | 43,750 | ||||||
| Ramona Doyle | 38,500 | 38,500 | ||||||
| Tina Marriott Larson | 38,500 | 38,500 | ||||||
| Michael Secora | 31,500 | 31,500 | ||||||
| Shafique Virani | 43,750 | 43,750 | ||||||
|
26 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Liquidity Event Value | Cumulative Vested Shares | ||||
| Greater than $7.11 | 150,000 | ||||
| Greater than $9.24 | 300,000 | ||||
| Greater than $12.02 | 450,000 | ||||
| Greater than $15.63 | 600,000 | ||||
| Greater than $20.32 | 750,000 | ||||
| Greater than $29.46 | 900,000 | ||||
| Greater than $42.72 | 1,050,000 | ||||
| Greater than $61.95 | 1,200,000 | ||||
| Greater than $89.83 | 1,350,000 | ||||
| Greater than $103.26 | 1,500,000 | ||||
| If liquidity event is | Then | ||||
| Our entering into a term sheet, letter of intent, or similar agreement for a financing (whereby equity securities (or securities convertible or exchangeable into equity securities) of ours or any of our subsidiaries are sold and issued to independent third parties primarily for capital raising purposes) that is approved by our board of directors | The amount to be payable for each share of our capital stock in connection with the financing, as set forth in the term sheet | ||||
| Our entering into a term sheet, letter of intent, or similar agreement for a change in control that is approved by our board of directors, the greater of (x) the amount to be payable for each share of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock in connection with the change in control, as set forth in, or determinable under the terms of, the term sheet or (y) if such change in control is actually consummated | The actual amount payable for each share of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock in connection with the change in control (with any amount that is subject to an escrow, earn-out, holdback or other similar arrangement not included in the Liquidity Event Value unless and until such amount is actually paid) | ||||
| An underwritten public offering of our common equity securities, including the offering under which this prospectus forms a part | The initial price to the public as set forth in the final prospectus included within the registration statement in Form S-1 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for such underwritten public offering | ||||
| The first sale or resale of our common equity securities to the general public in connection with a direct listing | The reference price set by the applicable stock exchange or national market system | ||||
| A Measurement Date* | The closing sales prices for a share of our Class A common stock or Class B common stock on such Measurement Date as quoted on the applicable stock exchange or national market system | ||||
| Significant Financial Event** | The amount to be payable for each share of our capital stock in connection with the applicable Significant Financial Event | ||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 27
|
||
|
28 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 29
|
||
| Name |
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options Exercisable
(#)
|
Number of
Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Unexercisable (#) |
Option
Exercise
Price
($/share)
|
Option
Expiration Date |
||||||||||
| Christopher Gibson | 346,354 | 1,125,000 | 2.48 |
12/31/2030
(1)
|
||||||||||
| Ramona Doyle | 187,500 | 562,500 | 2.48 |
12/31/2030
(2)
|
||||||||||
| Tina Marriott Larson | 600,937 | 111,563 | 1.06 |
7/23/2028
(3)
|
||||||||||
| 37,500 | 112,500 | 2.48 |
12/31/2030
(4)
|
|||||||||||
| Michael Secora | 187,501 | 632,811 | 2.22 |
3/4/2030
(5)
|
||||||||||
| 900,000 | 600,000 | 2.22 |
3/4/2030
(6)
|
|||||||||||
| Shafique Virani | 265,080 | 421,875 | 2.22 |
3/4/2020
(7)
|
||||||||||
|
30 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION | |||||||||||
| PLAN CATEGORY |
Number of
securities
to be issued
upon exercise
of outstanding
options, warrants
and rights
|
Weighted
average exercise
price of
outstanding
options, warrants
and rights
(3)
|
Number of securities
remaining available
for future issuance
under equity
compensation plans
(excluding securities in
first column)
|
||||||||
|
Equity compensation plans approved by security holders
(1)(2)
|
19,669,850 | 3.78 | 14,667,116 | ||||||||
| Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders | _ | _ | _ | ||||||||
| Total | 19,669,850 | 3.78 | 14,667,116 | ||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 31
|
||
|
32 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Name |
Fees Paid in Cash
($)
(1)
|
Stock Awards
($)
(2)
|
Option Awards
($)
(3)
|
Total
($) |
||||||||||
| Zachary Bogue, J.D. | 31,875 | — | — | 31,875 | ||||||||||
|
Blake Borgeson, Ph.D.
(4)
|
30,000 | 195,626 | 126,128 | 351,753 | ||||||||||
|
Terry-Ann Burrell, M.B.A.
(5)
|
41,250 | 195,626 | 126,128 | 363,003 | ||||||||||
|
R. Martin Chavez, Ph.D.
(6)
|
56,250 | 195,626 | 126,128 | 378,003 | ||||||||||
|
Zavain Dar
(1)
|
41, 250 | 41,250 | ||||||||||||
|
Robert Hershberg, L.D., Ph.D.
(7)
|
37,500 | 195,626 | 126,128 | 359,253 | ||||||||||
|
Dean Li, M.D., Ph.D.
(8)
|
35,625 | 434,726 | 296,744 | 767,095 | ||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 33
|
||
|
34 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 35
|
||
| Name of Beneficial Owner | Class A Common Stock |
Percentage
of Class A Common Stock (%) |
Class B Common Stock
†
|
Percentage
of Class B Common Stock (%) |
Percentage of Total Voting Power
(%) |
||||||||||||
| 5% and Greater Stockholders: | |||||||||||||||||
|
Lux Ventures
(1)
|
13,021,519 | 8.0 | — | — | 5.3 | ||||||||||||
|
DCVC
(2)
|
13,619,224 | 8.4 | — | — | 5.5 | ||||||||||||
|
MDC Capital Partners
(3)
|
8,740,917 | 5.4 | — | — | 3.6 | ||||||||||||
|
Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust plc
(4)
|
22,123,155 | 13.6 | — | — | 9.0 | ||||||||||||
|
Christopher Gibson
(5)
|
44,465 | 0.0 | 8,779,418 | 100 | 35.0 | ||||||||||||
| Named Executive Officers and Directors: | |||||||||||||||||
|
Christopher Gibson
(5)
|
44,465 | 0.0 | 8,779,418 | 100 | 35.0 | ||||||||||||
|
Ramona Doyle
(6)
|
267,207 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Tina Marriott Larson
(7)
|
805,215 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Michael Secora
(8)
|
1,754,613 | 1.1 | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
36 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
| Name of Beneficial Owner | Class A Common Stock |
Percentage
of Class A Common Stock (%) |
Class B Common Stock
†
|
Percentage
of Class B Common Stock (%) |
Percentage of Total Voting Power
(%) |
||||||||||||
|
Shafique Virani
(9)
|
423,728 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Zachary Bogue
(10)
|
13,620,594 | 8.4 | — | — | 5.5 | ||||||||||||
|
Blake Borgeson
(11)
|
7,669,896 | 4.7 | — | — | 3.1 | ||||||||||||
|
Terry-Ann Burrell
(12)
|
306,460 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
R. Martin Chavez
(13)
|
300,856 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Zavain Dar
(14)
|
3,599 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Robert Hershberg
(15)
|
310,987 | * | — | — | * | ||||||||||||
|
Dean Li
(16)
|
3,789,598 | 2.3 | — | — | 1.5 | ||||||||||||
|
All current executive officers and directors as a group (12 persons)
(17)
|
29,297,218 | 17.6 | 8,779,418 | 100 | 47.0 | ||||||||||||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 37
|
||
|
38 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
|
2022 Proxy Statement | Recursion | 39
|
||
|
40 | Recursion | 2022 Proxy Statement
|
||
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 |
|---|