23andMe’s founder Anne Wojcicki wins bid for bankrupt DNA testing firm

By Siddhi Mahatole and Mariam Sunny
(Reuters) -Anne Wojcicki is set to regain control of 23andMe after a $305 million bid from a nonprofit she controls topped Regeneron (NASDAQ:REGN) Pharmaceuticals’ offer for the DNA-testing company in a bankruptcy auction.
Last month, Regeneron agreed to buy the firm for $256 million, topping a $146 million bid from Wojcicki and the non-profit TTAM Research Institute.
The deal is expected to close in the coming weeks after a court hearing currently scheduled for June 17, the company said on Friday.
Once a trailblazer in ancestry DNA testing, 23andMe filed for bankruptcy in March, seeking to sell its business at auction after a decline in demand and a 2023 data breach that exposed sensitive genetic and personal information of millions of customers.
TTAM said on Friday it would uphold 23andMe’s existing privacy policies and comply with all applicable data protection laws.
Earlier this week, New York and more than two dozen other U.S. states sued 23andMe to challenge the sale of its customers’ private information.
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Missouri oversaw the bidding process.
Regeneron had said it was willing to make a new bid, but wanted a $10 million breakup fee if Wojcicki’s bid is ultimately accepted.
3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads.Should you invest $2,000 in REGN right now?Before you buy stock in REGN, consider this: ProPicks AI are 6 easy-to-follow model portfolios created by Investing.com for building wealth by identifying winning stocks and letting them run. Over 150,000 paying members trust ProPicks to find new stocks to buy – driven by AI. The ProPicks AI algorithm has just identified the best stocks for investors to buy now. The stocks that made the cut could produce enormous returns in the coming years. Is REGN one of them?
Reveal Undervalued Stocks Now