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20 March, 2026 |
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Unsurprisingly, one of the biggest private fundraising announcements in recent memory has gone to a company right in the middle of two major trends: China biotech and AI. Andrew Dunn reports on Earendil Labs' new $787 million raise, and what it's doing with all that capital. |
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Drew Armstrong |
Executive Editor, Endpoints News
@ArmstrongDrew
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Earendil Labs co-CEOs Jian Peng (L) Zhenping Zhu |
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by Andrew Dunn
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The US-headquartered, China-rooted biotech Earendil Labs said it has raised $787 million in private money, a whopping sum to fund an AI platform that has already produced a pipeline of over 40 drug programs. Despite all of the hype and attention around AI in biotech, Earendil has stayed more under the radar. One of the lead investors in the company, Dimension Capital's Zavain Dar, on
Friday called it "the DeepSeek of biotech," referencing the tiny Chinese startup that stunned AI giants at the start of 2025 by building competitive models with a fraction of the compute and resources. Earendil, founded in late 2024, sits at the convergence of two megatrends that are upending biopharma: the rise of AI technologies for discovering and designing drugs, and the growth of China's biotech
ecosystem. | |
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Kasim Kutay, Novo Holdings CEO (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images) |
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by Elizabeth Cairns
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The assets managed by Novo Holdings, the controlling shareholder of Novo Nordisk, fell by some 35% last year. But that doesn’t mean it will rein in its biotech investments in the year to come. “Seeing your asset value drop by a third, or whatever it is, is headline-grabbing,” Novo Holdings CEO Kasim Kutay told Endpoints News in an interview. “Of course it is a number to look at, but … it's not what I lose sleep over.” Kutay's company benefited enormously over the past five years or so as Novo Nordisk's value swelled on its
blockbuster GLP-1-based therapies for diabetes and obesity. Even with the Danish drugmaker's downturn since 2024 on increased competition, dividends and share-buyback proceeds continue to flow to Novo Holdings — all to the benefit of the charitable Novo Nordisk Foundation that is its ultimate owner. | |
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by Anna Brown
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The UK’s drug watchdog is reconsidering two Alzheimer's disease medicines after rejecting them for being too expensive. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence last year determined that Eli Lilly’s donanemab, marketed as Kisunla, and Biogen and Eisai’s lecanemab, known as Leqembi, were five to six times too costly to be recommended for the National Health Service. But since then, NICE has raised its cost-effectiveness threshold by 25% in response to a drug pricing deal with the US — enough to equate to around
three to five new drugs or label expansions being recommended annually. Donanemab and lecanemab could be the first drugs to win recommendations under the new pricing scheme, which now has an upper limit of £35,000 ($46,800), a NICE spokesperson told Endpoints News. | |
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