Cancer drugs are in hot demand. Last week Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) agreed to purchase prostate cancer-drug maker Cougar Biotechnology (NASDAQ:CGRB), and yesterday sanofi-aventis (NYSE:SNY) licensed a program, including two phase 1 compounds from Exelixis (NASDAQ:EXEL). If this is the level of deal activity before the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting, which kicks off today, imagine how high it could get once the companies are all in the same room together.

The deal looks like a good one for Exelixis. The company got $140 million up front and there's potential for $1 billion in milestone payments for meeting regulatory and commercial goals. Sanofi-aventis will take over the remaining clinical development, including footing the bill. The drugs (currently in phase 1 and phase 1b/2 trials) target a pathway commonly activated in human cancer cells that leads to survival and resistance to chemotherapy, so there's a lot of promise. The companies will collaborate on developing other compounds that target the same pathway, which should result in another $21 million for Exelixis.

Compare that to Johnson & Johnson's purchase of Cougar. It got one phase 3 drug and a couple of phase 1 drugs for $970 million. And Johnson & Johnson won't be paying double-digit royalties, so Exelixis is getting a good deal. It's also considerably more risky because the milestone payments and royalties aren't guaranteed. If the drugs don't work, there won't be any additional cash coming in.

Not that Exelixis needs much cash in the near future. Between this deal and the one it did with Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE:BMY) in December, the company seems pretty set for cash for the near future and shouldn't have any problems paying the first installment of its loan with GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE:GSK) due in October. If its stock skyrockets by then, Exelixis can repay all or part of the loan with stock, otherwise it has plenty of cash to make the first installment on the loan -- about $35 million or so. The cash will also put Exelixis in the driver's seat for future negotiations on other compounds in its vast pipeline that large pharmaceutical players might covet.

However, not every development-stage drugmaker is sitting on this much cash, so don't expect any other deals that may come out of ASCO to be this good.

Further Foolishness: