NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
IranStrikesMilitaryLabourTimelineTrumpFebruaryPartyTargetedNuclearDigestSaturdayIsraeliIranianCrisisDroneGreenOperationsEscalationDiplomaticKhameneiRegionalBorderPolicy
IranStrikesMilitaryLabourTimelineTrumpFebruaryPartyTargetedNuclearDigestSaturdayIsraeliIranianCrisisDroneGreenOperationsEscalationDiplomaticKhameneiRegionalBorderPolicy
All Articles
Hong Kong-listed Chinese drug firms set to turn corner on rising sales, licensing deals
South China Morning Post
Published 4 minutes ago

Hong Kong-listed Chinese drug firms set to turn corner on rising sales, licensing deals

South China Morning Post · Mar 1, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Hong Kong-listed mainland Chinese pharmaceutical companies are on track to deliver full-year profits, as surging drug sales and lucrative out-licensing deals with global partners start to pay off after years of research and development outlay. “Despite domestic challenges, particularly drug pricing pressure, the earnings performance of innovative drugs should still fare well in China in 2025,” said Tony Ren, head of Asia Healthcare Research at Macquarie Capital. Innovent Biologics, the first...

Full Article

Hong Kong-listed mainland Chinese pharmaceutical companies are on track to deliver full-year profits, as surging drug sales and lucrative out-licensing deals with global partners start to pay off after years of research and development outlay.“Despite domestic challenges, particularly drug pricing pressure, the earnings performance of innovative drugs should still fare well in China in 2025,” said Tony Ren, head of Asia Healthcare Research at Macquarie Capital.Innovent Biologics, the first Chinese company cleared to sell a drug for weight loss and diabetes, is expected to post its first full-year profit since going public – 984 million yuan (US$143.5 million) in 2025 – compared with a loss of 94.63 million yuan in 2024, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg.Revenue at Innovent, best known for its cancer treatment drug development, jumped about 45 per cent in 2025 to roughly 11.9 billion yuan, marking a “historic milestone”, the company said in a filing on February 4. The company, which launched six new products last year, releases its earnings release in late March.A worker checks a bottle filling fixture at a preparation workshop of Hengrui Biomedical Industrial Park in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province. Photo: Costfoto/Future Publishing via Getty ImagesFounded in 2011, Innovent was one of the first batch of firms to go public in 2018 under a new Hong Kong listing rule that let pre-revenue and loss-making drug and medical device developers raise capital.


Share this story

Read Original at South China Morning Post

Related Articles

South China Morning Post4 minutes ago
Hong Kong universities back AI-themed study tours to woo non-local students

At least five Hong Kong universities have backed the government’s proposal to launch study tours aimed at attracting non-local secondary students to pursue higher education in the city, with programmes featuring topics such as AI. The University of Hong Kong (HKU), the city’s oldest tertiary institution, said it would offer up to 35 programmes this summer, giving outstanding non-local students a chance to earn full scholarships. In this year’s government budget, education authorities said they...

South China Morning Post35 minutes ago
With Khamenei dead, who will be Iran’s next supreme leader?

The death of Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei raises paramount questions about the country’s future. And while a clerical panel is tasked with replacing him, succession is a complex matter in Iran’s theocracy. Here is what to know: A clerical council selects a new supreme leader An 88-member panel called the Assembly of Experts appoints the supreme leader. The panel can remove one as well, although that has never happened. The panel consists entirely of Shiite clerics who are...

South China Morning Postabout 2 hours ago
Indonesia is getting an aircraft carrier. The Philippines isn’t. Does it matter?

The Philippines cannot afford an aircraft carrier, could not sustain one if it had it and, according to most analysts, does not need one. What it needs is messier, cheaper and harder to photograph, they say: a web of missiles, patrol boats, frigates and surveillance assets designed not to project power, but to deny it. Two recent developments have made that choice harder to ignore. Last month, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr openly mused that an aircraft carrier with “accompanying...

South China Morning Postabout 2 hours ago
How China could narrow a tech hub’s income gap – and avoid Silicon Valley’s fate

Ahead of China’s annual legislative meetings – typically a window into Beijing’s top-level policy agenda – this is the third entry in a series examining the complex economic recalibration driving China’s growth philosophy and its wide-ranging implications for local governments, financial investors and private enterprises. In China’s eastern province of Zhejiang, a sprawling laboratory for Beijing’s “common prosperity” campaign to reduce income inequality, statistics suggest success: between 2021...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
Trump was once not keen on regime change in Iran – then he lost patience

With Saturday’s military operation against Iran, US President Donald Trump showed a dramatic evolution in risk tolerance, adjusting in just a matter of months how far he was willing to go in using American military might to confront Tehran’s clerical rule. Guardrails were tossed aside, as Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered up a battle plan that included targeted strikes on Iran’s leadership, including the 86-year-old Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose death...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
The high price of Hong Kong’s slow switch to electric buses and taxis

Hong Kong sees itself as a modern, well-governed, global city that moves with the times. On finance, education, legal services and logistics, that self-image holds. But when considering the green transition, particularly transport electrification, the gap between rhetoric and reality is increasingly hard to ignore. Nowhere is this more evident than in electrifying the taxi fleet, where the quarter-century timeline floated bears little resemblance to what is standard practice in neighbouring...