Are Mega-Deals Back for Real?

Dec 17, 2025 | Pharma

Image Source: Tung Lam from Pixabay
Written by: Dr. Jean Chatellier, PhD
On behalf of: KYBORA

By early Q4 2025, global pharma M&A had already crossed $70B in announced value, driven heavily by a handful of mega-deals, more than 2024, and tracking toward the highest levels since the post-2015 boom.

Unlike 2023–24, this wave isn’t driven by small tuck-ins. It’s being driven by mega-deals.

Look at the Headline Transactions Shaping 2025:

  • J&J → Intra-Cellular ($14.6B) for CNS leadership
  • Novartis → Avidity ($12B) for RNA therapeutics + neuromuscular platform
  • Merck → Cidara ($9.2B) for long-acting flu prevention + Cloudbreak modality
  • Sanofi → Blueprint (~US $9.1B) for precision oncology
  • Novo Nordisk → Akero (~$5.2B) for metabolic liver disease

And in just Q3, Merck acquired Verona for $10B, Genmab → Merus for $8B, & Pfizer → Metsera for $7.3B, all within ~90 days.

This is a clear reversal from the risk-off behavior of the last 2 years.

So Why are Large-Cap Pharmas Writing Big Checks Again?

1. The patent cliff is here.

$180–$300B in revenue goes off-patent by 2030. Keytruda, Eliquis, Stelara, Opdivo, Prolia: Each faces steep post-LOE erosion. Internal R&D can’t fill that gap alone.

2. Policy pressure

The IRA is compressing net prices and shortening product lifecycles, pushing buyers toward derisked, late-stage, payer-ready assets.

3. Pharma has firepower

Balance sheets are the strongest they’ve been in a decade. Under-levered companies are planning to deploy capital to sustain growth.

4. Platforms now matter as much as products

Most 2025 megadeals brought both:

  • RNA engines (Avidity)
  • Drug-Fc conjugates (Cidara)
  • In vivo cell and gene delivery (Orbital, Capstan)
  • Precision oncology platforms (Blueprint)

Buyers want multi-asset leverage, not single-product risk.

5. Market sentiment has shifted

After 2 conservative years, boardrooms see a window: Quality biotechs are still undervalued, but data-rich. Acting now is cheaper than acting in 2026–27 once valuations fully rebound.

How This Cycle Differs from the Last One:

  • More late-stage and commercial assets
  • Higher cash components
  • Modality-driven rationale, not broad IO bets
  • Heavy activity in metabolic, neuro, oncology, and infectious disease

This isn’t the broad speculative M&A boom of the mid-2010s, it’s a concentrated, platform-driven cycle.

If you’re Building in Biotech:

  • Lead with platform credibility: Durable engines outperform single-asset stories
  • Derisk what’s measurable: Human data, CMC clarity, payer readiness
  • Stay BD-ready: Rights clean-up, non-dilutive funding (like BARDA), tight data rooms
  • Time your window: 2025–27 is the strongest period before portfolios reset post-cliff.

The Bottom Line?

Mega-deals aren’t “coming back”, they’re already here.

And they’re reshaping what buyers value, how platforms are priced, and which companies will lead in the next decade of drug development.

Author: Dr. Jean Chatellier, PdD, Partner EVP and Senior Managing Director @ KYBORA
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeanchatellier/

 

    References: None

    Articles that may be of interest

    Raising Expectations for Medical Liaisons

    Raising Expectations for Medical Liaisons

    In the last decade, the Medical Science Liaison role has evolved from a scientific messenger to a field based strategist operating in one of the most highly scrutinized environments in healthcare. That evolution is why board certification is moving from optional...

    read more
    GSK Makes $2.2 Billion Bid for RAPT Therapeutics

    GSK Makes $2.2 Billion Bid for RAPT Therapeutics

    GSK has agreed to acquire US biotech company RAPT Therapeutics in a deal valued at approximately 2.2 billion US dollars, strengthening its position in immunology and signalling a major push into the emerging food allergy treatment market. The acquisition centres on...

    read more

    Articles that may be of interest

    Raising Expectations for Medical Liaisons

    Raising Expectations for Medical Liaisons

    In the last decade, the Medical Science Liaison role has evolved from a scientific messenger to a field based strategist operating in one of the most highly scrutinized environments in healthcare. That evolution is why board certification is moving from optional...

    read more
    GSK Makes $2.2 Billion Bid for RAPT Therapeutics

    GSK Makes $2.2 Billion Bid for RAPT Therapeutics

    GSK has agreed to acquire US biotech company RAPT Therapeutics in a deal valued at approximately 2.2 billion US dollars, strengthening its position in immunology and signalling a major push into the emerging food allergy treatment market. The acquisition centres on...

    read more