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Unlike past deals where Chinese firms kept only regional rights, new partnerships, like Hengri's with Bristol Myers, include options for co-commercialization globally. This signals a strategic shift from being regional R&D partners to becoming global commercial entities.
Western pharma firms strategically license assets from Chinese biotechs while leaving China rights with the local partner. This leverages China's faster, cheaper clinical development, as the partner tests the molecule in new indications, generating valuable data that de-risks the asset for the global firm at no extra cost.
A notable trend is the licensing of advanced clinical assets from Chinese biotechs to major global pharmaceutical companies for ex-China rights. Deals like Roche licensing Medilink's Phase 3 ADC and AbbVie licensing Reamgen's Phase 2 bispecific antibody signal China's evolution from a market to a source of high-value, late-stage innovation.
Western pharmaceutical companies are no longer seeking cheap 'me-too' assets in China. Instead, they are paying premium prices for genuinely innovative drugs, as evidenced by a 10x increase in deal size over five years and a surge in patent filings from the region.
Large multinational pharma companies publicly express concern about the threat from China's biopharma sector. Simultaneously, these same companies are investing billions, actively integrating China into the global ecosystem and contradicting their own zero-sum game narrative.
A disconnect exists between the public rhetoric of U.S. pharma leaders, who frame China's growing biotech sector as a threat, and their corporate actions. These same companies are investing heavily in Chinese R&D and manufacturing, revealing a dual strategy of public caution and private commitment to integrating China into the global biopharma ecosystem.
Driven by significant government investment, China is rapidly becoming a leader in biotech R&D, licensing, and outsourcing. This shift is a top-of-mind concern for US biotech and pharma executives, with China now involved in a majority of top R&D licensing deals.
The Sino Biopharmaceutical and Sanofi deal for rovodicitinib, a drug already approved in China, signals a key trend. Chinese biotechs are now developing and securing domestic approval for novel assets before out-licensing them for global commercialization, commanding significant upfront payments and billion-dollar milestone potentials.
In a major strategic shift, large pharmaceutical companies are increasingly sourcing their M&A pipeline from China. Chinese assets now account for 30-40% of Big Pharma's early-stage acquisitions, up from single digits just a few years ago, primarily because they are significantly cheaper than US or European equivalents.
Global pharma companies must be flexible when structuring deals with Chinese biotechs. Many Chinese firms face post-IPO obligations requiring them to retain Greater China rights and be the Marketing Authorization Holder to book revenue, which prevents simple global licensing deals.
Despite US-China tensions threatening innovation, the likely outcome is 'coopetition'—a blend of competition and collaboration—as global pharmaceutical firms navigate the dual imperatives of advancing innovation and ensuring supply chain resilience.