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14 April, 2026 |
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J&J leaders trumpeted the recent approval of Icotyde as a game-changing moment that will help it overcome the biosimilar cliff for Stelara. Wall Street still needs to be convinced. Max Gelman has more. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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Joaquin Duato, Johnson & Johnson CEO (Amir Hamja/Bloomberg via Getty Images) |
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by Max Gelman
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Johnson & Johnson executives believe the worst of the biosimilar pressure facing Stelara is behind them, and feel confident enough to predict significant growth through the end of the 2020s. But Wall Street may need convincing. On Tuesday morning's first-quarter earnings call, J&J leaders
repeatedly and eagerly trumpeted the recent approval of Icotyde as a game-changing moment for the company. CEO Joaquin Duato even made the bold claim that plaque psoriasis pill Icotyde “has the potential to be one of our largest products ever.” In addition, continued strong sales of the immunology drug Tremfya and the cancer therapy Darzalex, as well as other
newer approvals for Inlexzo and Rybrevant in oncology, colored Tuesday’s call with a clear sense of optimism. It’s a departure for the normally tight-lipped company, which usually prefers to let people read between the lines. | |
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by Ayisha Sharma
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Another stock offering blitz is adding more fuel to biotech investors' belief in the sector. Revolution Medicines anchored Monday's offering surge, while Spyre Therapeutics and Allogene Therapeutics also joined in. The trio is planning to raise almost $1.5 billion through stock or debt sales as they look to fund further pipeline activity
after positive data readouts from key programs. Revolution represents a huge chunk of the cash, intending to raise $1 billion that would be split between a $750 million stock offering and a separate $250 million sale of convertible senior notes. It's all part of a continued upward trend in fundraising. At the tail end of 2025, seven biotechs secured $3.2 billion through stock sales, a single-day record that beat an initial $2.3 billion target. Equity offerings had been on the rise for months at that point, reversing a year-long slump in the wake of the pandemic. Startups are also getting in on the favorable environment with multiple megarounds in the last two weeks. | |
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Michael Torres, CrossBridge Bio CEO |
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by Andrew Dunn
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Biotech entrepreneur Michael Torres is selling his antibody-drug conjugate startup CrossBridge Bio to Eli Lilly in a deal worth up to $300 million, the two companies announced Tuesday. Torres, a PhD biologist who previously co-founded ReCode Therapeutics, started CrossBridge in 2023 and only raised a $10 million seed round before Tuesday's deal announcement. The six-employee, Houston-based biotech made speedy progress in building better linkers for antibody-drug conjugates, or ADCs, which caught the attention of Lilly. In an interview with Endpoints News, Torres said talks with members of Lilly's deals team escalated quickly into an acquisition. The two sides met this
January at the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, following up from a previous introductory meeting at JPM in 2025, Torres said. Lilly will pay up to $300 million, split between an undisclosed upfront payment and a development milestone-contingent payment. | |
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