Biogen Banks $5.6 Billion on Apellis as Big Pharma M&A Appetite for Biotech Heats Up

Biogen (Nasdaq: BIIB) is making its most consequential portfolio move in years, announcing a definitive agreement to acquire Apellis Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: APLS) for $41.00 per share in cash — an upfront equity consideration of approximately $5.6 billion — plus a contingent value right (CVR) tied to future sales milestones for its flagship eye disease therapy. The deal closed out March with a statement: big pharma is hungry, and specialty biotech is on the menu.

The transaction carries an 86% premium to Apellis’ 90-day volume-weighted average stock price and a 35% premium to its 52-week high. It is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026.

What Biogen Is Getting

At the center of the deal are two commercialized complement-targeting therapies: SYFOVRE® (pegcetacoplan injection), approved for geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration, and EMPAVELI® (pegcetacoplan), approved across three rare immune-mediated conditions — C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), primary IC-MPGN, and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

Together, the two drugs generated $689 million in combined net product revenue in 2025, with growth expected in the mid-to-high teens annually through at least 2028. For a company navigating revenue headwinds from its legacy MS portfolio, that near-term visibility is exactly what Biogen needed.

SYFOVRE holds particular strategic weight as the first-ever approved therapy for geographic atrophy — a progressive retinal disease affecting more than five million people globally. Long-term efficacy data shows the drug can delay GA lesion progression by approximately 1.5 years in key patient populations, giving the asset durable commercial runway. The GA space is one that smaller innovators are also actively pursuing. Ocugen (Nasdaq: OCGN), is developing a gene therapy approach targeting inherited retinal diseases — the kind of differentiated, mechanism-driven science that has increasingly attracted large-cap attention.

The Nephrology Angle

Beyond the immediate revenue story, the strategic rationale runs deeper into kidney disease. Apellis brings an established nephrology sales infrastructure that Biogen intends to leverage for felzartamab, its Phase 3 kidney disease candidate with a first trial readout expected in the first half of 2027.

EMPAVELI’s rare kidney disease approvals — including the only FDA-approved treatment for pediatric patients with C3G and the first approval for post-transplant C3G recurrence — underscore how defensible rare nephrology positions can be. Two other emerging growth companies are staking ground in adjacent kidney disease spaces: Unicycive Therapeutics (Nasdaq: UNCY), developing oxylanthanum carbonate for hyperphosphatemia in chronic kidney disease patients, and Eledon Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: ELDN), advancing therapies focused on reducing kidney transplant rejection. The Biogen-Apellis deal reinforces that nephrology is becoming a high-value destination for large-cap dealmaking.

A Market Signal Worth Noting

The Apellis acquisition didn’t land in a vacuum. Earlier today, Eli Lilly announced a separate agreement to acquire Centessa Pharmaceuticals for up to $47.00 per share — a deal valued at approximately $7.8 billion including contingent payments — to bolster its neuroscience pipeline in sleep-wake disorders. Two major biotech acquisitions announced on the same day signals something broader: pharmaceutical companies with strong balance sheets are actively scanning for de-risked, commercially validated or late-stage assets, and they’re willing to pay premium prices to get them.

For investors tracking small and microcap biotech, that backdrop matters. Companies building real clinical differentiation in immunology, nephrology, and ophthalmology are operating in exactly the spaces that large pharma is now paying billions to enter.

CVR Structure and Financial Outlook

The CVR entitles Apellis shareholders to two potential payments of $2 per share, contingent on SYFOVRE hitting $1.5 billion and $2 billion in annual global net sales between 2027 and 2030. Biogen expects the deal to be increasingly accretive to non-GAAP diluted EPS starting in 2027, with full de-leveraging targeted by end of 2027.

Biogen’s Bold $1.8B Kidney Disease Treatment Acquisition

Biogen Inc. is doubling down on novel therapies for rare diseases, announcing an acquisition of Human Immunology Biosciences that could be valued at up to $1.8 billion. The deal gives Biogen full rights to HI-Bio’s lead drug candidate felzartamab, which is being studied for several chronic kidney conditions with large unmet medical needs.

The transaction reflects Biogen’s strategic shift under CEO Christopher Viehbacher to diversify beyond its core neuroscience franchise. Just months after the $6.5 billion buyout of kidney disease specialist Reata Pharmaceuticals, Biogen is opening its checkbook again to beef up its pipeline of potential rare disease medicines.

HI-Bio’s felzartamab has completed mid-stage trials for two types of kidney disorders – primary membranous nephropathy and transplant glomerulopathy where the immune system attacks a transplanted organ. Importantly, it is also being evaluated for IgA nephropathy, a leading cause of kidney failure with no approved treatments available.

For Biogen, the deal provides another shot on goal as it navigates an uncertain period. While its newly-launched Alzheimer’s drug Leqembi has shown promise, the company was forced to abandon its previous Alzheimer’s treatment Aduhelm after years of controversy. Biogen’s older multiple sclerosis franchises are facing rising competitive threats as well.

The HI-Bio acquisition gives Biogen added pipeline diversification into nephrology and autoimmune diseases. Felzartamab has a unique approach, as it is an anti-FcRn antibody that targets pathogenic IgG antibodies which can damage kidneys and other organs.

If felzartamab can demonstrate positive efficacy and safety in broader Phase 3 testing, it could eventually have multi-billion dollar peak sales potential across its targeted kidney indications according to analyst forecasts. However, there is no guarantee of clinical or regulatory success.

From a financial perspective, Biogen is paying $1.15 billion upfront for private HI-Bio, along with contingent value rights worth up to $650 million if certain development and commercial milestones are achieved. This is relatively modest compared to Biogen’s $6.5 billion acquisition of Reata announced in February.

The HI-Bio deal continues Biogen’s aim to revamp its R&D pipeline through a series of bold acquisitions and partnerships under Viehbacher. The company is betting that assembling a portfolio of high-risk, high-reward clinical candidates for diseases like Alzheimer’s and kidney disorders will ultimately pay off.

For the healthcare sector and public markets, Biogen’s aggressive business development approach is emblematic of the ongoing consolidation wave. With rising costs of drug development and payer pricing pressures, large biopharma companies are increasingly looking to acquisitions of smaller, more focused biotechs to source external innovation.

While Biogen’s M&A strategy carries substantial financial risk, the HI-Bio deal gives it a promising asset that could reshape treatment for serious kidney diseases if it can overcome the high hurdle of clinical success. For healthcare investors, absorbing Biogen’s evolving pipeline story will be crucial in evaluating the company’s future growth prospects.

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