Boston’s biotech sector reels due to Trump health policy uncertainty - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
生物科技

Boston’s biotech sector reels due to Trump health policy uncertainty

00:00

{"text":[[{"start":0.5,"text":"The live music, free drinks and dancing at a big Boston biotech conference in June belied a stark reality: the city’s biotech sector is in trouble."}],[{"start":1,"text":"While some industries are still languishing since the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates in 2022, few have been hit as hard as the biotech sector by Trump administration policies."}],[{"start":1.5,"text":"Concerns about routine medicine approvals from the US Food and Drug Administration have frightened investors. The White House’s calls for lower drug prices have chilled deal activity so far this year. President Donald Trump’s attacks on Harvard University have included freezing federal research grants, posing a long-term threat to biotech."}],[{"start":112.35,"text":"Altogether, the Trump “policy uncertainty has resulted in significant turmoil and operational changes at biopharma companies”, Morgan Stanley said in a June report."}],[{"start":112.85,"text":"Meanwhile, the lack of investor appetite for new issues has closed the door for many biotechs waiting to go public. Typically, the biotech sector produces at least a dozen initial public offerings a year. But recently, “public [biotech] companies have gotten crushed”, said Dan Gold, president of Fairway Consulting Group, which does biotech recruiting. “There is no exit for venture people when they put in their money now.”"}],[{"start":113.35,"text":"“We are actually seeing companies close, which is new,” Gold said. “I have not seen closures at this volume ever.”"}],[{"start":113.85,"text":"For the first six months of the year, the number of biotech IPOs sank to its lowest level since 2012, according to Renaissance Capital. Venture capital firms brought no biotech companies to an IPO for the first time since 2011, Renaissance said."}],[{"start":114.35,"text":"“It is a very tough environment,” said Matthew Kennedy at Renaissance. “At this point, many of the biotechs themselves might be reluctant to move forward knowing they might have a hard time selling the deal.”"}],[{"start":114.85,"text":"Vaccine-maker Moderna, which is headquartered on the north side of Boston’s Charles River, has seen its share price sink 27 per cent this year. The company, a top-20 employer in Boston’s Cambridge neighbourhood, is one of the worst performers in the S&P 500 this year."}],[{"start":115.35,"text":"A fifteen minute drive to the north, bluebird bio, which was a $10bn biotech company in 2018, was sold earlier this year for less than $50mn. Vor Biopharma, which is based three subway stops from Harvard University, said in May it would lay off most of its staff."}],[{"start":115.85,"text":"“What we are seeing in public and private markets is a number of companies that are actually folding,” Marian Nakada, a vice-president at Johnson & Johnson’s venture division, said at the conference. In June, Vor announced a $175mn fundraising as part of a licence agreement with a Chinese biotech company, but a Vor spokeswoman said the lay-offs were still proceeding."}],[{"start":null,"text":"

The headquarters of bluebird bio in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was valued at $10bn in 2018
"}],[{"start":116.35,"text":"Boston’s small biotech companies have powered the regional economy. Healthcare is Boston’s largest employment sector. Healthcare and social assistance jobs comprise 22 per cent of the city’s workforce, well above the 14 per cent national average, according to government statistics."}],[{"start":116.85,"text":"Boston has enjoyed a symbiotic relationship between the federal government and local universities — one that has been crippled by government funding cuts. The National Institutes of Health has halted grants to Harvard and other universities, hitting a fertile ground for biotech development."}],[{"start":106.28,"text":"Deals in biotech that are getting done are under pressure from Washington. Verve Therapeutics, which is based a short walk from Boston’s famous Fenway Park baseball field, was acquired by Eli Lilly in June for $1.3bn. But the deal was prompted in part by the uncertainty following the resignation of a top FDA official, Verve said in a June 25 regulatory filing. The company said its share price plunged after Peter Marks quit, raising concerns that FDA approvals could be delayed."}],[{"start":124.24,"text":"“The declining regulatory landscape for biopharmaceutical companies” had made raising cash “even more difficult”, Verve said."}],[{"start":132.589,"text":"Earlier in June, KalVista Pharmaceuticals, which is headquartered on the Charles River, said the FDA missed a regulatory deadline for one of its drug approvals. The delay was “due to heavy workload and limited resources” at the agency, KalVista said. A company spokeswoman declined to comment beyond its regulatory filings."}],[{"start":156.64,"text":"Boston’s June biotech conference was hosted by the Biotechnology Innovation Organization, the sector’s biggest lobbying group. To counter Trump’s policies, the organisation has increased its lobbying this year by hiring former Republican senator Richard Burr, who sponsored the FDA Modernization Act of 1997."}],[{"start":176.127,"text":"At the conference, FDA commissioner Marty Makary said the agency’s “morale is good and improving”."}],[{"start":184.572,"text":"But Gold at Fairway Consulting Group said he was having conversations almost every week with FDA employees looking for new jobs. “I think the morale is awful there from what I am hearing.”"}],[{"start":198.756,"text":"Morale is also suffering at Harvard, Cambridge’s biggest employer. Promising biotech science that starts at such universities can be spun out into independent companies. Boston’s Beam Therapeutics, for example, was co-founded by Harvard professor David Liu. Beam has a licence agreement with Harvard and has paid the university $15mn since the company’s IPO."}],[{"start":225.35,"text":"“I definitely have long-term concerns about the trajectory of funding in the US and the stability of our science ecosystem,” Beam’s chief executive John Evans said in an interview."}],[{"start":245.64,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1751844261_7695.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

死刑犯辩护律师布莱恩•史蒂文森:“希望是我们的超能力”

这位律师兼维权人士谈推翻死刑定罪的工作——以及他对民权成果正被逐步拆解的担忧。

通胀再次直击餐桌

关闭霍尔木兹海峡可能引发食物危机。

贝莱德首席执行官拉里•芬克警示:人工智能或加剧财富不平等

全球最大资产管理公司的首席执行官表示,为人工智能提供资金支持的富裕人士可能会收获大部分回报。

人工智能如何重塑法律行业的商业版图

大律师安东尼•西尔是这一代在法庭中开始使用新工具的大律师之一。

绘制OpenAI“生态系统”全景

摩根士丹利发布了“AI生态系统图谱”系列的最新一期报告,研究AI行业内部的资本流动。

OpenAI的“红色警报”战略转向

该公司展现出一定的商业自律,放弃了Sora视频应用和情色聊天机器人的计划。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×