The funding brings Nestle's total investment to $473 million,
increasing the Swiss company's stake to 19.9% of Aimmune's
outstanding stock and voting power.
Aimmune shares rose 5.7% in early morning trading, after falling 11%
on Tuesday. Its therapy, Palforzia, was approved on Friday after
markets close.
Nestle's investment is an incremental positive for Aimmune's shares,
which have seen some weakness due to investor worries over
financing, Piper Sandler analyst Christopher Raymond wrote in a
note.
"With this additional investment, we think the prospect of an
outright take out by Nestle (or anyone else for that matter) has to
be factored in more than before," Raymond said.
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Nestle has been trying to become a "nutrition, health and wellness"
company, with its Nestle Health Science unit playing a pivotal role,
as packaged food sales slow amid changing tastes.
The unit invested $145 million in Aimmune in 2016, followed by $30
million as part of the drugmaker's public offering in February 2018,
and another $98 million in November 2018.
Aimmune would use the latest Nestle investment to fund the launch of
Palforzia, which is the first approved therapy for reducing and
potentially eliminating allergic reactions to peanuts in children.
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Baird analyst Brian Skorney suspects a potential for short squeeze
as some decide to cover rather than wait for the performance of
Palforzia in the first couple of quarters against modest
expectations.
Short interest, a measure of how much money is betting on the stock
to go lower, in Aimmune stood at nearly 25% of the float, as of Jan.
15, according to Refinitiv data.
Shares of heavily shorted companies can get pushed higher as traders
rush to buy stock to cover their short bets, triggering what is
known as a "short squeeze".
Separately, California-based Aimmune said it had obtained a
worldwide license to an experimental therapy for allergic asthma
from Xencor Inc for an upfront payment of $5 million in cash and $5
million in equity.
(Reporting by Saumya Sibi Joseph in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun
Koyyur, Maju Samuel and Shinjini Ganguli)
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