An uptick in positive clinical data reported in recent months has helped nudge the BioWorld Biopharmaceutical Index (BBI) to its highest point this year. BBI is up by 15.58%, significantly higher than the 1.36% increase recorded at the end of August, just as statistically significant clinical results began to roll in from a number of biopharma companies.
The number of biopharma deals with nonprofit or government entities has dwindled in recent months, while industry grants are climbing. Combined, however, a total of 936 bio/nonprofit deals and grants worth $11.17 billion is down by 37% in comparison with last year’s $17.8 billion and by 58.7% in comparison with 2020’s $27 billion. The volume also is down significantly by 16.8% from 2021 and by 33.4% from 2020.
A large notes offering this month and a pick-up in public raises have boosted med-tech financings, which are now tracking similarly with 2019. So far this year, the med-tech industry has raised $35.7 billion through 457 transactions. The amount raised is down by 23% in comparison with the same time frame in 2021, although a few months ago that gap was 48%. The current volume is down by 25.4%.
A mega-deal and high-money buyouts may have given a boost to BioWorld’s Drug Developers Index in October, but safety issues, money troubles and failed trials continue to hold stocks down. Compared with the broader markets, drug development companies are showing the same ups and downs, influenced by rising inflation and a struggling economy, as well as uncertainties caused by war, the COVID-19 pandemic and politics.
Despite coming out strong earlier this year, biopharma deals have slowed significantly, with values now falling behind 2021 by 7.6%. In August, deals were ahead of all recent years, showing a 7% increase over last year. Through early November, the industry has completed 1,296 deals, including licensings, joint ventures and collaborations, valued at $154.6 billion.
Biopharma financings in 2022 are now tracking 12% higher than the pre-pandemic year of 2019, but they still pale in comparison with each of the last two years, both of which were standout years by every measure.
While weekly global and U.S. confirmed cases of COVID-19 are below each of the last two years, infectious disease experts remain on guard. There are still about 1,500 people dying around the world each day, including 350 in the U.S., and the SARS-CoV-2 virus may continue to find ways to outmaneuver current treatments and vaccines.
Despite a busy September, U.S. FDA approvals and global regulatory news fell in October to the lowest point this year. So far in 2022, the FDA has approved 127 drugs and biologics, including supplemental filings. This is 25% less than each of the last two years, which had 170 approvals in 2021 and 169 approvals in 2020 through the end of October. The last time approvals were lower than this year was 2016 when there were 121.
Clinical data through the last week of October 2022 has dropped 17% in comparison with 2021. So far in 2022, there have been a total of 2,812 phase I, II and III clinical entries, compared with 3,389 during the first 10 months of 2021.