After a clinical failure, Wrapped Therapeutics in-licensed an antibody from China for $35 million upfront. Just over a year later, without conducting new trials, they were acquired by GlaxoSmithKline for $2.2 billion, showcasing an incredibly rapid and successful turnaround via strategic business development.

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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.

Major pharmaceutical companies are committing to bio-buck deals worth billions for unproven, preclinical assets. The Sanofi-Irindale deal ($2.56B potential) and the Pfizer-Cartography deal ($850M+ potential) for discovery-stage programs show a high appetite for risk when accessing innovative technology platforms and novel targets early on.

While innovation from China is increasingly integrated into Western pharma pipelines, there's little expectation of outright acquisitions of Chinese companies. The consensus is that licensing a specific asset is far simpler and avoids the significant political and regulatory complexities of a full M&A transaction.

Big Pharma's strategy differs by region: they are willing to acquire innovative US biotechs outright but prefer to only license assets from Chinese companies. This is because Chinese assets can be secured at significantly lower valuations without the complexities of a full M&A transaction, creating an exit dilemma for VCs in China.

The Simcirzyming and Ipsen deal, valued up to $1.06 billion for a preclinical antibody-drug conjugate (ADC), shows the immense value of promising therapeutic modalities. Technologies like ADCs with features like 'enhanced tumor penetration' can secure massive bio-dollar deals long before human trials, signaling intense competition for next-generation oncology assets.

With patent cliffs looming and mature assets acquired, large pharmaceutical companies are increasingly paying billion-dollar prices for early-stage and even preclinical companies. This marks a significant strategic shift in M&A towards accepting higher risk for earlier innovation.

GSK's CSO reveals their "bolt-on" deal-making focuses on late-stage clinical assets that may have failed trials or have suboptimal profiles. They acquire these assets when they believe a better trial design or repositioning can unlock the molecule's true potential, as exemplified by their acquisition of Momalotinib.

Contrary to common belief, a BioCentury analysis revealed that two-thirds of out-licensing deals from Asian innovators were with Western biotechs, not large multinational pharmaceutical corporations. This indicates a significant trend of smaller Western companies actively sourcing innovation from Asia.

Repro Novo licensed a drug that did not meet its primary endpoint in a prior Phase 2b trial. They identified a positive signal in an exploratory endpoint—improved semen quality—and built their new clinical strategy around making that the primary endpoint, salvaging a potentially valuable asset.

Wrapped Therapeutics Turned a $35M Chinese Asset into a $2.2B GSK Acquisition in 13 Months | RiffOn