Monday, October 27, 2025

Swiss drugmaker Novartis to buy Avidity Biosciences for $12 billion

Swiss drugmaker Novartis on Sunday said it agreed to acquire U.S. biotech firm Avidity Biosciences for about $12 billion in cash, as the company looks to bolster its portfolio of treatments for rare muscle disorders.

As per the terms of the deal, Avidity stockholders will receive $72 per share in cash, representing a premium of 46% to the company’s closing on Friday. Bloomberg News reported on the deal earlier, citing a person familiar with the matter.

Novartis has been proactively striking deals this year to address the impending patent cliff for some of its blockbuster drugs, including Entresto for heart failure, Xolair for asthma and Cosentyx for autoimmune diseases.

Under the terms of the deal, Avidity will separate its early-stage precision cardiology programs into a new company called Spinco, which is expected to be a publicly traded company, Avidity said in a separate release.

With this acquisition, Novartis is expanding into areas with limited treatment options, while strengthening its presence in the rare disease landscape.

San Diego, California-based Avidity, a clinical-stage company, is developing treatments for various muscle disorders and advancing several first-in-class drug candidates.

Its lead drug, Del-zota, is in early-to-mid-stage development as a potential treatment for a rare form of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, while the company is also working on two other drugs for serious muscle diseases.

Avidity, which has a market cap of nearly $6.7 billion, is working on three experimental drug candidates aimed at treating rare neuromuscular disorders. These candidates, expected to seek approval by 2026, use a special technology designed to deliver RNA therapeutics directly to muscle tissue.

Kathleen Gallagher, currently Avidity’s chief program officer, will take the helm at Spinco after the spin-off, Avidity said.

The deal helps Novartis to establish a stronger foothold in the U.S. market amid a potential hefty pharmaceutical tariff threat from U.S. President Donald Trump.

In response to the tariff proposals put forward by the Trump administration, major pharmaceutical companies like Johnson & Johnson, Roche and Sanofi have pledged several billion dollars in U.S. investments as they look to navigate uncertain trade policies.

The Trump administration imposed 39% tariffs on Switzerland in August, triggering a sharp drop in Swiss exports to the United States that month. Pharmaceutical companies were, however, exempted from the initial U.S. duties.

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