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Venture capital is shifting towards creating new companies from multiple de-risked assets acquired from large pharma. Bain's $300M investment to build a company around five BMS assets, led by a proven CEO, exemplifies this strategy. It mirrors previous successes like SpringWorks and minimizes single-asset failure risk.
BridgeBio's founder saw biotech VCs exclusively funding high-risk "home run" platforms. He built a company to acquire therapies for smaller rare genetic diseases—"singles and doubles"—that were ignored. Aggregating these de-risks the portfolio and creates a major market opportunity.
Synnovation's deal structure allows it to sell a single oncology asset for a large return to VCs, while the core drug discovery team remains to advance the rest of the pipeline. This 'hive-off' model offers a compelling alternative to traditional M&A or IPO exits.
Forbion identified an arbitrage: promising biotech assets in China whose originators lacked global development expertise. Their strategy is to create new Western companies, in-license these assets, and install an experienced team to unlock their "rest of world" value, a model proven by a billion-dollar exit.
Recent large financing rounds, like Soli's $200M Series C and Parabillus's $305M Series F, are predominantly for companies with proprietary discovery platforms rather than single-asset biotechs. This indicates investor confidence in technologies that can generate a pipeline of multiple future therapies, valuing repeatable innovation over individual drug candidates.
In a market favoring asset-centric biotech, Springtide VC remains focused on platform companies. This countercyclical strategy mitigates the binary risk of single-asset failure and allows for multiple "shots on goal" and diverse business models, such as partnerships or becoming a drug developer.
Contrary to seeking fully de-risked assets, pharmaceutical companies often prefer acquiring companies with some remaining clinical risk. This strategy allows them to leverage unique insights on early data to acquire assets at a better valuation, creating an opportunity for outsized returns before the value is obvious to others.
After years of focusing on de-risked late-stage products, the M&A market is showing a renewed appetite for risk. Recent large deals for early-stage and platform companies signal a return to an era where buyers gamble on foundational science.
Apogee built its strategy around known biological mechanisms, focusing innovation solely on antibody engineering. This allowed them to de-risk assets early and efficiently (e.g., proving half-life in healthy volunteers). This clear, stepwise reduction of risk proved highly attractive to capital markets, enabling them to raise significant funds for late-stage development.
Paragon Therapeutics operates a venture creation factory. Instead of discovering new targets, it applies its core half-life extension technology to validated biologics to create improved "bio-better" versions. It then spins these assets out into disease-focused companies like Spire (IBD), de-risking development by focusing on engineering and execution rather than novel biology.
The venture creation strategy for platform biotechs isn't about finding one blockbuster drug. It's a binary bet: either the underlying scientific platform is sound and can repeatedly generate many medicines, or the entire concept fails. There is no middle ground of succeeding with just one product from the platform.