Attached files

file filename
8-K - PDL BIOPHARMA, INC 8-K 5-11-2011 - PDL BIOPHARMA, INC.form8k.htm

Exhibit 99.1
 
1
Bank of America Merrill Lynch 2011 Health
Care Conference
May 11, 2011
 
 

 
Forward Looking Statements
This presentation contains forward-looking statements, including PDL’s expectations with respect to its future royalty
revenues, expenses, net income, and cash provided by operating activities.
 
Each of these forward-looking statements involves risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those,
express or implied, in these forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause differences between current expectations
and actual results include, but are not limited to, the following:
 The expected rate of growth in royalty-bearing product sales by PDL’s existing licensees;
 The relative mix of royalty-bearing Genentech products manufactured and sold outside the U.S. versus manufactured
 or sold in the U.S.;
 The ability of PDL’s licensees to receive regulatory approvals to market and launch new royalty-bearing products and
 whether such products, if launched, will be commercially successful;
 Changes in any of the other assumptions on which PDL’s projected royalty revenues are based;
 Changes in foreign currency rates;
 Positive or negative results in PDL’s attempt to acquire royalty-related assets;
 The outcome of pending litigation or disputes, including PDL’s current dispute with Genentech related to ex-U.S. sales
 of Genentech licensed products; and
 The failure of licensees to comply with existing license agreements, including any failure to pay royalties due.
Other factors that may cause PDL’s actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-
looking statements in this presentation are discussed in PDL’s filings with the SEC, including the "Risk Factors" sections
of its annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC. Copies of PDL’s filings with the SEC may be obtained at the
"Investors" section of PDL’s website at
www.pdl.com. PDL expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release
publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in PDL’s
expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statements are
based for any reason, except as required by law, even as new information becomes available or other events occur in the
future. All forward-looking statements in this presentation are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement.
2
 
 

 
Overview of PDL BioPharma
3
 
 

 
Company Overview
 PDL pioneered the humanization of monoclonal antibodies
 which enabled the discovery of a new generation of
 targeted treatments for cancer and immunologic diseases
 PDL’s primary assets are its antibody humanization patents
 and royalty assets which consist of its Queen et al. patents
 and license agreements
 Licensees consist of large biotechnology and
 pharmaceutical companies including Roche/Genentech/
 Novartis, Elan/BiogenIdec, Pfizer/Wyeth/J&J and Chugai
4
 
 

 
Antibody Humanization Technology
 Antibodies are naturally produced by humans to
 fight foreign substances, such as bacteria and
 viruses
 In the 1980’s, scientists began creating antibodies in
 non-human immune systems, such as those of
 mice, that could target specific sites on cells to fight
 various human diseases
 However, mouse derived antibodies are recognized
 by the human body as foreign substances and may
 be rejected by the human immune system
5
 PDL’s technology allows for the “humanization” of mouse derived antibodies by moving
 the important binding regions from the mouse antibody onto a human framework
 PDL’s humanization technology is important because the humanized antibodies retain the
 binding and activity levels from the original mouse antibody
 PDL’s technology has been incorporated into antibodies to treat cancer, eye diseases,
 arthritis, multiple sclerosis and other health conditions with aggregate annual sales of over
 $17 billion
 
 

 
Mission Statement
 Queen et al. Patents
  Manage patent portfolio
  Manage license agreements
 
 Purchase new royalty generating assets
  Assets that improve shareholder return
  Commercial stage assets
  Prefer biologics with strong patent protection
 
 Optimize return for shareholders
6
 
 

 
Corporate Governance
Management
 John McLaughlin
 
President & CEO
 Christine Larson
 
VP & CFO
 Christopher Stone
 
VP, General Counsel &
 Secretary
 Caroline Krumel
 
VP of Finance
 Danny Hart
 Associate General Counsel
Board of Directors
 Fred Frank
 
Lead Director
 Jody Lindell
 John McLaughlin
 Paul Sandman
 Harold Selick
7
 
 

 
Licensed Products and Royalty Revenue
8
 
 

 
Licensed Products and Royalty Revenue
9
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee 2. As reported by Roche; assume 1.155 CHF/USD
 
 

 
How Long will PDL Receive Royalties from
Queen et al. Patents?
 PDL’s revenues consist of royalties generated on sales of licensed products
  Sold before the expiration of the Queen et al. patents in mid-2013 through end of 2014
 or
  Made prior to the expiration of the Queen et al. patents and sold anytime thereafter
10
Example of Antibody Formulation, Fill and Finish Schedule
½ month
1 month
½ month
2-3 months
Thaw, Formulation
& Vial Filling
Quality
Release
Packaging
& Quality
Inventory
Example of Antibody Bulk Manufacturing Schedule
Cell
Culture
Quality Release
Testing
Bulk Frozen Storage
1 mo
3 mos
5 mos
10 mos
15 mos
20 mos
27 mos
3 mos
2-18 months
1mo
1mo
Purification to Concentrated Bulk/Frozen
 
 

 
Genentech Product Made or Sold in U.S.
 
Net Sales up to $1.5 Billion
3.0%
Net Sales Between $1.5 Billion and $2.5 Billion
2.5%
Net Sales Between $2.5 Billion and $4.0 Billion
2.0%
Net Sales Over $4.0 Billion
1.0%
Genentech Product Made and Sold Ex-U.S.
 
All Sales
3.0%
Queen et al Patents - Royalty Rates
11
 Tysabri and Actemra
 § Flat, low single-digit royalty
 Genentech Products (Avastin, Herceptin, Lucentis1 and Xolair)
 § Tiered royalties on product made or sold in US
 § Flat, 3% royalty on product made and sold outside US
 § Blended global royalty rate on Genentech Products in 2010 was 1.9%
 § Blended royalty rate on Genentech Products in 2010 made or sold in US
 was 1.5%
1. As part of a settlement with Novartis, which commercializes Lucentis outside US, PDL agreed to pay to Novartis certain
 amounts based on net sales of Lucentis made by Novartis during calendar year 2011 and beyond. The amounts to be paid are
 less than we receive in royalties on such sales and we do not currently expect such amount to materially impact our total
 annual revenues.
 
 

 
Shift of Manufacturing Sites = Higher Royalties
 Roche is moving some manufacturing ex-US which may result in higher royalties
 to PDL due to the flat 3% royalty for Genentech Products made
and sold ex-US
  Current production at Penzburg (Herceptin) and Basel (Avastin) plants
  Two new plants in Singapore (CHO = antibody and e. coli = antibody fragment)
 - E. coli (Lucentis) and CHO (Avastin) plants are approved for commercial supply to the US
 - E. coli and CHO plants are expected to be approved for commercial supply to the EU in 2011
 - Currently, all Lucentis is made in the US
12
Percent of Total Worldwide Sales1
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Royalty Revenue & Licensed Products
13
Royalties by Product
($ in millions)
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Approved
14
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Avastin
15
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
Roche (Genentech)
Avastin
Approved
 
 
 
 
sBLA
Phase 3
Colorectal Cancer
NSCLC
Metastatic Renal Cell
Glioblastoma
Metastatic Breast HER2- 1st Line
Metastatic Breast HER2- 2nd Line
Ovarian Cancer
Gastric
 
     
 
     
 
     
       
       
ü On December 16, 2010, FDA notified Roche/Genentech of its intention to withdraw
 Avastin’s approval as first line treatment for HER2- breast cancer in combination with
 paclitaxel.
ü In response to request from Genentech, FDA scheduled a hearing on June 28-29, 2011 to
 allow Genentech to present why Avastin should remain FDA-approved for HER2- breast
 cancer.
ü On December 16, 2010, EMEA narrowed, but did not withdraw Avastin’s approval for first
 line treatment of HER2- breast cancer in combination with paclitaxel.
ü Roche lowered its estimate of peak annual sales from of Avastin from CHF8 - CHF9 billion
 to CHF7 billion.
ü On April 15, 2011, Roche announced that CHMP issued a positive opinion for the use of
 Avastin in combination with Xeloda for 1st-line HER 2- breast cancer.
 
ü Based on our internal model, we project Avastin for treatment of metastatic HER2- breast
 cancer represents slightly more than 2% of total PDL royalty revenue.
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Avastin
16
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
Roche (Genentech)
Avastin
Approved
 
 
 
 
sBLA
Phase 3
Colorectal Cancer
NSCLC
Metastatic Renal Cell
Glioblastoma
Metastatic Breast HER2- 1st Line
Metastatic Breast HER2- 2nd Line
Ovarian Cancer
Gastric
 
     
 
     
 
     
       
       
ü On February 7, 2011, Genentech reported that Phase 3 trial in women with previously
 treated (recurrent), platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer showed an improvement in
 progression free survival in those patients treated with Avastin in combination with
 chemotherapy (carboplatin and gemcitabine) followed by continued use of Avastin alone
 compared to those treated with chemotherapy alone.
ü Two previous Phase 3 studies in women with newly diagnosed ovarian cancer
 demonstrated that front-line Avastin in combination with standard chemotherapy
 (carboplatin and paclitaxel), followed by the continued use of Avastin alone, significantly
 increased progression free survival compared to treatment with chemotherapy alone.
ü Roche has submitted an application for approval for first line treatment in EU and expects
 a decision later in 2011.
ü Genentech expects to file an application for approval in US in 2011.
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Avastin
17
       
   
 
Phase 2 ISP
Adjuvant settings
Retinopathy of Prematurity
 
Herceptin
Approved
Breast HER2+ Cancer
HER2+ Stomach and Gastro-Esophageal cancers
 
Lucentis
Approved
Approved
Phase 3
AMD
RVO
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü On February 16, Research to Prevent Blindness Foundation and the U.S. National Eye
 Institute announced results from a trial showing that just 4% of the infants who developed
 retinopathy of prematurity and were treated with Avastin suffered a recurrence of the
 disease compared to 22% of those babies with the disease who received laser treatment.
ü Retinopathy of prematurity is a disease that harms the retina and is the most common
 cause of blindness in infants.
ü Because the trial was not sponsored by Genentech/Roche, it is not clear whether they will
 seek approval for this indication.
ü The publication of this data in the February 17 issue of the New England Journal of
 Medicine
should result in significant off-label use in this disease.
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Lucentis
       
       
 
     
 
Lucentis
Approved
Approved
Phase 3 (US)
AMD
RVO
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü On January 7, Novartis announced that Lucentis has been approved in the EU for the
 treatment of visual impairment due to diabetic macular edema (DME).
 § DME is a leading cause of blindness in the working-age population in most
 developed countries.
ü On February 11, 2011, Genentech announced that one of two Phase 3 studies evaluating
 in patients with DME showed that a significantly higher percentage of patients receiving
 monthly dosing of Lucentis achieved an improvement in vision of at least 15 letters on the
 eye chart at 24 months compared to those in a control group, who received a placebo
 injection.
18
 
 

 
       
       
 
     
 
Lucentis
Approved
Approved
Phase 3
AMD
RVO
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü On November 22, 2010, Regeneron and its partner, Bayer, reported top line data from two
 Phase 3 trials investigating its VEGF Trap in age-related macular degeneration (AMD)
 patients which suggest that it may be injected into the eye every other month with safety
 and efficacy comparable to that of monthly dosing of Lucentis.
ü On December 20, 2010, Regeneron has also reported positive Phase 3 data in the
 treatment of retinal vein occlusion (RVO) for which Lucentis is approved.
 § Unlike the AMD trial, monthly administration was used in the RVO trial, which does
 not afford a dosing advantage with respect to Lucentis.
ü On February 22, 2011, Regeneron and its partner, Bayer, filed an application for approval
 of its VEGF Trap for treatment of AMD with a PDUFA date of August 20, 2011 based on
 priority review.
ü Regeneron filed suit in February 2011 seeking a summary judgment that it does not
 infringe Genentech’s patents.
ü Genentech filed a countersuit in April 2011 asserting that Regeneron is willfully infringing
 Genentech’s patents, seeking treble damages and asking for injunctive relief.
19
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Lucentis
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
       
 
   
HER2+ Stomach and Gastro-Esophageal cancers
 
Lucentis
Approved
Approved
Phase 3
AMD
RVO
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü On April 4, 2011, Genentech and Johns Hopkins University reported results of a review of
 files of 77,886 patients with AMD who received either Avastin off-label or Lucentis.
ü Patients receiving Avastin off-label had an 11% increased risk of overall mortality, 57%
 increased risk of hemorrhagic cerebrovascular accident, 80% more likely to have ocular
 inflammation and 11% more likely to have cataract surgery following treatment than
 Lucentis treated patients.
ü Authors of the study note that it is limited due to incomplete information on confounding
 factors such as smoking, lipid and blood pressure levels, etc.
20
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Lucentis
       
       
 
   
HER2+ Stomach and Gastro-Esophageal cancers
 
Lucentis
Approved
Approved
Phase 3
AMD
RVO
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü On April 28, 2011, New England Journal of Medicine reported the results from the NEI’s
 CATT study comparing Lucentis and Avastin on fixed and variable schedules in the
 treatment of AMD.
ü Efficacy results from the first year of the two year study showed that, with respect to the
 primary endpoint of mean change in visual acuity (number of lines of letters on an eye
 chart) at 12 months, less expensive Avastin was not inferior to Lucentis.
 § It is estimated that off label use of Avastin in the U.S. was 60% prior to the results of
 the CATT trial.
ü At 12 months, serious adverse events (primarily hospitalizations) occurred at a 24 percent
 rate for patients receiving Avastin and a 19 percent rate for patients receiving Lucentis.
 However, preliminary 24 month safety data showed no difference between Lucentis and
 Avastin treated patients in terms of death, stroke and all arteriothrombotic events.
21
 
 

 
Royalty Products - Tysabri
22
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
       
 
     
 
     
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
ü Biogen Idec and Elan made regulatory filings with FDA and EMA to update the label of
 Tysabri to reflect that anti-JC virus antibody status could be used to stratify the risk of
 progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML).
 § On April 18, 2011, CHMP recommended inclusion of JC virus (JCV) status as a risk
 factor the product label for Tysabri in the EU.
 § The CHMP also recommended a five-year renewal of the Tysabri’s Marketing
 Authorization in the EU.
ü On April 22, 2011, FDA disclosed the estimated risk of PML infection in Tysabri treated
 patients is 0.3 per 1,000 patients during the first two years of treatment, 1.5 per 1,000
 patients during months 25 to 36, and 0.9 per 1,000 after three years. Limited data is
 available beyond four years.
 
 

 
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
Roche (Genentech)
Avastin
Approved
 
Colorectal Cancer
NSCLC
 
     
 
 
Phase 3
DME
 
Xolair
Approved
sBLA
Moderate-Severe Asthma
Pediatric Asthma
Elan
Tysabri
Approved
Multiple Sclerosis
Roche (Chugai)
Actemra
Approved
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Royalty Products - Actemra
23
ü On January 5, 2011, Roche announced that FDA expanded the Actemra label to include
 inhibition and slowing of structural joint damage, improvement of physical function, and
 achievement of major clinical response in adult patients with moderately to severely active
 rheumatoid arthritis.
ü On April 18, 2011, FDA approved Actemra to treat patients age 2 and older with active
 systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA).
 § It is the first and only approved treatment for SJIA, a rare and severe form of arthritis
 affecting children.
 
 

 
Future Royalty Products - Development Stage
24
 
 

 
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
Roche (Genentech)
T-DM1
Phase 2 & 3
Breast HER2+ Cancer
 
Ocrelizumab
Phase 2b
Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
 
Pertuzumab
Phase 3
Metastatic HER2+ Breast Cancer
Roche
Afutuzumab
Phase 3
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Elan/J&J/Pfizer
Bapineuzumab
Phase 3
Alzheimer’s Disease
Lilly
Solanezumab
Phase 3
Alzheimer’s Disease
Merck
Datoluzumab
Phase 2
Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Abbott/Biogen Idec
Daclizumab
Phase 3
Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
       
Future Royalty Products - T-DM1
25
25
ü On October 13, 2010, Roche/Genentech announced preliminary, six month results from a
 Phase 3 trial in second line HER2+ breast cancer patients which showed that 48% of
 women treated with T-DM1 had their tumors shrink compared with 41% of those taking
 the combination of Herceptin and Taxotere.
 § Among the women taking the standard therapy, 75% had side effects of grade 3 or
 higher on a 5-point scale, compared with 37% of those getting T-DM1.
 
 

 
Future Royalty Products - Pertuzumab
26
Licensee
Product
Status
Indications
Roche (Genentech)
T-DM1
Phase 2 & 3
Breast HER2+ Cancer
 
Ocrelizumab
Phase 2b
Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
 
Pertuzumab
Phase 3
Metastatic HER2+ Breast Cancer
Roche
Afutuzumab
Phase 3
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Elan/J&J/Pfizer
Bapineuzumab
Phase 3
Alzheimer’s Disease
Lilly
Solanezumab
Phase 3
Alzheimer’s Disease
Merck
Datoluzumab
Phase 2
Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
Abbott/Biogen Idec
Daclizumab
Phase 3
Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
Eisai
Farletuzumab
Phase 3
Ovarian Cancer
ü On December 10, 2010, Roche/Genentech reported the results from a Phase 2 trial
 investigating the neoadjuvant (prior to surgery) use of pertuzumab and Herceptin plus
 chemotherapy for the treatment of early-stage, HER2+ breast cancer.
ü Treatment significantly improved the rate of complete tumor disappearance in the breast
 by more than half compared to Herceptin plus docetaxel, p=0.014.
ü Roche expects a global regulatory filing of pertuzumab at the end of 2011.
 
 

 
Genentech / Roche - Product Pipeline
2011
2012
2013
Post 2013
Avastin
Lucentis
Diabetic Macular Edema (US)
Pertuzumab1
mBC HER2+ 1st Line
Avastin + Herceptin
mBC HER+ 2nd Line
Avastin
Relapsed Ovarian Cancer
Actemra
RA DMARD H2H (EU)
Actemra
Ankylosing Spondylitis
Herceptin
Subcutaneous Formulation
Avastin & Herceptin
HER2+ mBC 1st Line
Avastin
mCRC TML
Actemra
SC Formulation (EU)
Afutuzumab (GA101)
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Avastin
BC Adjuvant HER2+
Avastin
BC Adj Triple Negative
Herceptin
BC HER 2+ Adj 2 Year
Avastin
Glioblastoma 1st Line
Avastin
HER 2- BC adj
Avastin
NSCLC adj
1. Not a licensed product; source Roche investor update, April 14, 2011
US & EU Filings Calendar
 
 

 
Financial Update
28
 
 

 
Financial Overview
29
1. Includes $92.5 million one time legal settlement to MedImmune. Net interest expense
 includes $17.6 million loss on convertible note retirement.
2. Includes $10.0 million one time legal settlement from UCB.
 
 

 
New 2015 Convertible Notes
 Terms
  $135 million convertible, non-callable senior notes due May 2015
 - Option for the bankers to purchase an additional ~$20 million within 13 days after
 first issuance of the Notes
  Coupon rate is 3.75%
  Conversion price is $7.92/share
  50% hedge effectively increases conversion price to $9.31½ /share
 Timing
  Transaction was priced on Tuesday, May 10th
  Transaction expected to close on Monday, May 16th
 Use of Proceeds
  Repurchase or redeem from time to time PDL’s convertible notes
 due in February 2012 with a current principle balance of $133 million
  Pay cost of convertible note hedge transactions
  General corporate purposes
30
 
 

 
$497 Million Debt
 $250 million 2.00% convertible senior notes due February 2012; current
 principal amount $
133 million
  Conversion rate is 144.474 shares / $1,000 face amount ($6.92/share)
 $180 million 2.875% convertible senior notes due February 2015 placed
 November 1, 2010
  Conversion rate is 144.474 shares / $1,000 face amount ($6.92/share) 
 $300 million 10.25% secured non-recourse notes; current principal amount
 $
184 million
  Distributed $200 million of proceeds as special dividend of $1.67/share in December
 2009
  Approximately 40% of Genentech royalties dedicated to quarterly principal and interest
 payments; principal repayment fluctuates in relation to royalties received
  Anticipated final maturity is September 2012; legal maturity is March 2015
  After final maturity, securitized Genentech royalties will be retained by PDL
 In order to pay a dividend, PDL must first satisfy a net assets test at the
 time of dividend declaration by Board of Directors
31
 
 

 
Legal Matters
32
 
 

 
Recent Resolution of Legal Disputes
 PDL has resolved all challenges to the Queen et al. Patents in the
 U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and the European
 Patent Office (EPO) as well as its dispute with MedImmune
  UCB Pharma
 - PDL received $10 million from UCB and PDL agreed not to sue UCB for any royalties
 related to Cimzia
 - UCB terminated patent interference proceedings before the USPTO and withdrew its
 opposition appeal in the EPO
  MedImmune
 - PDL paid MedImmune $65 million on February 15, 2011 and will pay them an additional
 $27.5 million by February 2012
 - MedImmune ceased support of any party in the EPO opposition appeal
  Novartis
 - PDL dismissed its claims against Novartis in its Nevada lawsuit
 - Novartis withdrew its opposition appeal to PDL’s European patent in EPO
 - PDL will pay Novartis an amount based on Novartis’ net ex-U.S. sales of Lucentis during
 calendar year 2011 and beyond
  BioTransplant
 - PDL acquired BioTransplant, a bankrupt company and instructed BioTransplant to
 withdraw its opposition appeal in the EPO
33
 
 

 
Pending Dispute with Genentech and Roche
 In August 2010, Genentech sent a fax on behalf of Roche and Novartis
 asserting its products do not infringe PDL’s supplementary protection
 certificates (SPCs)
  Products include Avastin, Herceptin, Lucentis and Xolair
  SPCs are extensions of patent term in Europe that are issued on a country-by-country
 and product-by-product basis
 PDL Response
  Genentech’s assertions are without merit
  PDL disagrees with Genentech’s assertions of non-infringement
  Genentech had waived its rights to challenge our patents, including SPCs in its 2003
 Settlement Agreement with PDL
 2003 Settlement Agreement
  Resolved intellectual property disputes between the two companies at that time
  Limits Genentech’s ability to challenge infringement of PDL’s patent rights, including
 SPCs, and waives Genentech’s right to challenge or assist other in challenging the
 validity of our patent rights
34
 
 

 
Nevada Lawsuit Against Genentech/Roche
 PDL filed a lawsuit against Genentech and Roche in Nevada
 state court
  Lawsuit states that fax constitutes a breach of 2003 Settlement
 Agreement because Genentech assisted Roche in challenging PDL’s
 patents and SPCs
  Complaint seeks compensatory damages, including liquidated damages
 and other monetary remedies set forth in the 2003 Settlement
 Agreement, punitive damages and attorney’s fees
 
 In November 2010, Genentech and Roche filed two motions
 to dismiss
  They contend that 2003 Settlement Agreement applies only to PDL’s
 U.S. patent rights
  They asserted that the Nevada court lacks personal jurisdiction over
 Roche
  On April 21, 2011, Nevada court heard arguments on two Genentech
 and Roche motions
  If case proceeds, trial is not yet scheduled and not expected until 2012
35
 
 

 
Optimizing Stockholder Return
36
 
 

 
Business Strategy
 Purchase new royalty assets and
 ladder like a bond portfolio
  Continue to reinvest in new royalty
 assets and pay dividends
  Debt repaid by end of 2015
  Company continues as long as it
 can generate satisfactory return
 If unable to acquire royalty assets
 on attractive terms, build cash
 reserves to
  Repay debt
  Use all excess cash to pay
 dividends to enhance shareholder
 return
  Wind-up company in 2016
 timeframe
37
 Queen et al. patents expire end of 2014;
 royalties will likely continue to ~ 2016
 There are two possible pathways
 forward for PDL
 
 

 
Optimizing Stockholder Return
 Continuously evaluating alternatives
  Dividends
  Capital restructure
  Share repurchase
  Company sale
  Purchase of commercial stage, royalty
 generating assets
38
 
 

 
Investment Highlights
 Strong historic revenue growth from approved products
 Potential for additional indications from existing
 products, new product approvals and purchase of new
 royalty assets
 Potential to grow and diversify revenues with the
 addition of new royalty assets
 Significantly reduced expenses with no R&D burn
 Liquidity - volume averages 3 million shares/day
 Return to stockholders
  In 2011, $0.60/share to be paid in quarterly regular dividends of
 $0.15/share in March 15, June 15, September 15 and
 December 15
39
 
 

 
Appendix
40
 
 

 
Avastin
 Licensor
  Genentech (US) and Roche (ex-US)
 Mechanism
  As a tumor grows, it exceeds the ability of the local
 blood supply to nourish it
  Tumor causes up regulation of vascular endothelial
 growth factor (VEGF) stimulating angiogenesis or the
 growth of leaky blood vessels to nourish the tumor
  Avastin targets and inhibits VEGF reduction in blood
 vessels “starving” the tumor
 Approvals
  Metastatic colorectal cancer, advanced non-small cell
 lung cancer, renal cancer, metastatic HER2- breast
 cancer and glioblastoma
 Sales
  2010 worldwide net sales of $6.4 billion1
 - US is reviewing approval for metastatic HER2- breast cancer and EU
 has narrowed this label, resulting in drop in sales for this indication
41
Treatment with Avastin
reduces vascularization
or blood supply of tumor
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Herceptin
 Licensor
  Genentech (US) and Roche (ex-US)
 Mechanism
  Some breast cancer cells make too many (over-express)
 copies of a particular gene known as HER2 that causes
 rapid growth of the breast cancer cell
  Herceptin works by attaching itself to the HER2
 receptors on the surface of breast cancer cells, blocking
 them from receiving growth signals and slowing or
 stopping the growth of the breast cancer cell
  Herceptin also fights breast cancer by alerting the
 immune system to destroy cancer cells onto which it is
 attached
 Approvals
  Metastatic HER2+ breast cancer, metastatic HER2+
 stomach cancer
 Sales
  2010 worldwide net sales of $5.4 billion1
42
Without Herceptin treatment,
cell surface receptors signal
into the HER2+ breast cancer
cell to proliferate
Herceptin binds to cell surface
receptors inhibiting
intracellular signals thus
preventing cancer cell
proliferation
and signaling the
immune system to “kill” the
cancer cell
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Lucentis
43
 Licensor
  Genentech (US) and Novartis (ex-US)
 Mechanism
  A form of VEGF known as VEGF-A causes the
 formation of leaky blood vessels result in the
 swelling in the macula and vision loss
  Lucentis binds to and inhibits VEGF-A before it
 can cause the formation of the leaky blood vessels
 preserving and sometimes improving vision
 Approvals
  Wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD),
 macular edema or swelling following retinal vein
 occlusion, diabetic macular edema
 Sales
  2010 worldwide net sales of $3.0 billion1
 - Recent NIH study comparing safety and effectiveness
 of Lucentis finds less expensive Avastin equally
 efficacious - will adversely affect future Lucentis sales
 for AMD
 - It’s estimated that in the U.S. 60% of AMD patients are
 already treated with off-label Avastin
Cross
section of
normal
macula at
back of eye
Cross
section of
macula with
AMD causing
loss of vision
Amsler Grid as
seen through
normal eyes
Amsler Grid as
seen through
eyes with AMD
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Xolair
44
 Licensor
  Genentech (US) and Novartis (ex-US)
 Mechanism
  IgE plays a role in allergic disease by
 causing the release of inflammatory
 mediators from mast cells that result in
 sneezing, wheezing and asthma
  Xolair binds to and neutralizes circulating
 IgE by preventing IgE from binding to its
 mast-cell receptor
 Approvals
  Moderate-to-severe persistent asthma
 Sales
  2010 worldwide net sales of $1.0 billion1
Xolair antibody (yellow) binds to IgE
(blue) preventing IgE from binding to
mast cell. Otherwise, IgE binding to
mast cell would result in wheezing,
sneezing and asthma.
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Tysabri
45
  EU authorities have recommended renewal of
 Tysabri’s approval for the typical five year
 period
In MS, the body’s
autoimmune system is
inappropriately activated,
resulting in it attacking
the body. Here, defense
cells, known as T cells,
are activated.
Activated T cells are able
to cross the blood brain
barrier affording them
access to nerve cells.
Activated T cells attack,
and recruit other defense
cells known as
macrophages, to attack
and consume the myelin
sheath or insulation
surrounding nerve fibers.
The resulting holes in the
myelin slow the
transmission of impulses
along the nerve and
cause the symptoms of
MS.
1. As reported to PDL by its licensee
 
 

 
Actemra
46
 Licensor
  Roche and Chugai
 Mechanism
  Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease in
 which the body's immune system attacks itself
  One of the defense mechanisms inappropriately
 activated in RA is IL-6, which can result in destruction of
 the cartilage between joints causing the symptoms of
 RA
  Actemra binds to and neutralizes IL-6 preventing it from
 destroying cartilage thereby blocking one of the causes
 of RA
 Approvals
  Treatment of signs and symptoms in moderate-to-
 severe adult RA patients, slowing of structural damage
 to joints caused by RA and preservation physical
 function of joints afflicted by RA
 Sales
  2010 worldwide net sales of $459 million1
It is the degradation and
eventual destruction of this
cartilage that causes the
symptoms of RA.
1. As reported by Roche; assume 1.155 CHF/USD