+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Here's what's happened to the companies Martin Shkreli used to run

Feb 13, 2016, 22:30 IST

Advertisement
AP Photo/Craig Ruttle, File

Martin Shkreli might still be in the public eye thanks to his tweets requesting exclusive rights to Kanye West's new album, but businesses that he ran have quickly faded from the public's attention.

Over his career, Shkreli founded four companies and headed five as CEO. Some were hedge funds, and others pharmaceutical companies.

Facing securities-fraud charges, Shkreli is no longer working for any of them, but his legacy at the drugmakers remains. Both Turing Pharmaceuticals and Retrophin have left intact the price hikes that drew so much public ire toward Shkreli and the drug industry at large.

Here's what we know - and don't know - about the status of former companies once run by Shkreli.

The hedge funds

Shkreli began his career as a hedge fund manager. He founded MSMB Capital Management in his 20s, making the Forbes 30 under 30 list. His fund is described as "best known to investors as an activist who battled billionaires and entrenched drug industry executives through blog posts, shareholder letters, regulatory filings, and even an attempted hostile takeover."

Advertisement

This also happens to be the company involved in the SEC's charges against Shkreli. After managing funds at MSMB Capital, where he lost $3 million on bad trades but neglected to tell investors. He then went on to found another hedge fund, called MSMB Healthcare, and convinced investors to back it as well.

The securities-fraud charges against Shkreli center on his alleged "Ponzi scheme" setup, in which he used funds raised for one company to pay back debt for the last company.

Incidentally, MSMB was his second fund. At the first, Elea Capital, he lost all the money he managed for investors, according to the charges against him.

Status: busted

Retrophin

After dealing with pharma companies from a hedge fund perspective, Shkreli decided to strike out and found his own such company: Retrophin. Founded in February 2011, the company has had a rocky past with Shkreli, eventually ousting him in October 2014 - but not before he managed to raise the price of a kidney drug called Thiola by 2,000%.

*The price has remained the same despite Shkreli's departure. Retrophin has two other drugs on the market, and is developing rare-disease treatments for kidney and neurological disorders. 

Advertisement

But Retrophin now faces a new challenge. Compounding pharmacy Imprimis Pharmaceuticals is working on a $6 a pill alternative to the now $30 a pill Thiola, it said last week, though it remains to be seen if that will have any impact on its market share.

Status: Holding strong, doing some solid development.

&quotNew Enigma machine for our office. Perhaps it will help us crack the code in drug development."Martin Shkreli via Twitter

Turing Pharmaceuticals

As Congress saw in a hearing last week, Turing is committed to its pricing strategy when it comes to Daraprim.

Excerpts from documents obtained by Congress indicate that Shkreli expected the move to increase the price of one Daraprim pill from $13.50 to $750 to yield profits for at least three years. "I think it will be huge ... Almost all of it is profit and I think we will get 3 years of that or more," Shkreli wrote in an August message highlighted by the committee. "Should be a very handsome investment for all of us. Let's all cross our fingers that the estimates are accurate."

The private company also has a medication to treat hypertension. Turing was founded less than a year ago, and said that it was working on researching and developing new treatments for toxoplasmosis, epilepsy, and others. Most are in preclinical or early-stage development. We've reached out to Turing for more information on that research.

Advertisement

Status: Standing by the pricing strategy for Daraprim.

KaloBios

The small, public pharmaceutical company Shkreli joined in November as CEO was having a hard time before Shkreli stepped in and acquired 70% of the company. The move at the time sent KaloBios' shares soaring.

After Shkreli became CEO, the company announced that it had bought the US rights to a drug that treats a rare parasitic infection called Chagas Disease. We've asked KaloBios about the status of that purchase and will update if we get a response.

When asked about treatments for Chagas Disease, the CDC said, "In the United States, these drugs are not FDA approved and are available only from CDC under investigational protocols at no cost to the patient."

Since Shkreli's December arrest, KaloBios has been delisted from the NASDAQ, terminated Shkreli, and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Advertisement

Status: Delisted, bankrupt, and potentially out of the game

NOW WATCH: Martin Shkreli offered Kanye West $10 million to not release his newest album

Please enable Javascript to watch this video
You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article