
India's Biocon plans IPO for biosimilars business by March 2026
The company plans to launch five new biosimilars in the U.S. in the new fiscal year, starting in April, and is aspiring for double-digit market share for them, Biocon Biologics CEO Shreehas Tambe told Reuters in an interview.
Biosimilars are similar and relatively affordable versions of high-priced and complex biologics drugs used to treat illnesses such as cancer and autoimmune diseases.
"We needed to be in charge and control of the business (before taking the company public). I think we're pretty much there... We should be looking at the next 12-15 months to this fiscal, which is March 2026 (for listing)," Tambe said.
The company, which has been pushing its IPO plans for the past year, has been waiting to complete the integration of its acquired biosimilars firm Viatris and refinance debt before it goes public.
The new U.S. launches, in addition to four existing biosimilars, will focus on therapy areas including diabetes, oncology and immunotherapy.
The company's existing biisimilars have a 20% market share, Tambe said.
The U.S. contributes about 40% in revenue to Biocon Biologics, followed by 35% from Europe where the company plans to launch three new biosimilars in the next 18 months.
The firm hopes to benefit from U.S. President Donald Trump's stand on healthcare affordability, Tambe said.
"..there is a bipartisan view on on bringing affordability to healthcare and I think biosimilars have a big role to play in this," he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
18 minutes ago
- Reuters
Liverpool spending backed by title win and long-term plan, says CEO
July 24 (Reuters) - Liverpool's big-money investment on transfers is the result of long-term planning, club CEO Billy Hogan said, adding that winning a record-equalling 20th English top-flight title convinced the club it was time to act like a modern powerhouse. Liverpool's latest acquisition, French striker Hugo Ekitike from Eintracht Frankfurt in a deal worth 79 million pounds ($106.84 million), including add-ons, has taken the club's transfer expenditure this window to nearly 300 million pounds. Outgoings, six players including Trent Alexander-Arnold, have so far generated around 64 million pounds. The outlay marks a sharp departure from Liverpool's traditionally measured approach in the market. However, Hogan insists the club has not deviated from the club's policy of financial sustainability. "It doesn't just happen; it's been years in the making," Hogan told The Athletic, opens new tab in an interview. "One of the things we're constantly focused on is that 'virtuous circle'. Trying to run the club in the right way to ensure that we can generate as much revenue as we possibly can. That obviously helps in terms of being able to put more back into the team. "The difficulty is if you just look at one individual summer. That probably skews the data. There were a lot of comments made last summer that we didn't spend enough..." Hogan explained the approach reflects the ambitions of American-led Fenway Sports Group (FSG), who are seeking to build on last season's Premier League title under manager Arne Slot. "We also recognise, having won the English league title for the 20th time, that this is one of the biggest clubs in the world. We want to make sure that we are behaving like one," he added. "Having massive global stars come and play at Anfield, filling out stadiums in Hong Kong and Japan, those are things we expect and want to do." Liverpool face AC Milan in Kowloon, Hong Kong on Saturday, before taking on Yokohama FM in the J League World Challenge in Yokohama on Wednesday. They begin their Premier League title defence at home against Bournemouth on August 15. ($1 = 0.7394 pounds)


Reuters
18 minutes ago
- Reuters
Brazil's biggest conilon coffee cooperative to launch cocoa pilot project in Bahia state
SAO PAULO, July 24 (Reuters) - Brazil's biggest conilon coffee cooperative, Cooabriel, is launching a cocoa pilot project in the country's Bahia state slated for September in collaboration with commodities powerhouse Cargill, it said in an interview this week. Cooabriel hopes the pilot, located in the south of Bahia, will produce around 10,000 60-kilogram bags of cocoa beans, working with farmers who are already producing conilon coffee, part of the same family as Robusta beans. The pilot project is another example of efforts in Brazil, once the world's second-biggest cocoa producer, to rebuild the country's standing in the global industry after its output was devastated by disease in the 1980s. "It's still somewhat of a timid project, but it is a promising project," Cooabriel's President Luiz Carlos Bastianello told Reuters in an interview. The majority of Cooabriel's coffee producers in Bahia are already producing cocoa and the cooperative wants to help them boost their productivity, while also possibly picking up some new farmers along the way, Bastianello said. Cargill is supporting the pilot project, which is financed by Cooabriel, as part of its aim to see major chocolate consumer Brazil become self-sufficient in cocoa production, Cargill's director of cocoa origination, Murilo da Silva Severo, said in an email. "This partnership with Cooabriel has the potential to bring Cargill an annual increase of 1,500 (metric) tons of beans," Severo said, adding the quantity could increase and Cargill has already suggested Cooabriel take the project to the neighboring state of Espirito Santo. Though similarities exist between conilon coffee farming and cocoa production, Cooabriel will have to contend with some challenges around market volatility and storing the cocoa beans, the cooperative's manager of new businesses, Alexandre Costa Ferreira, said. "If we work on this correctly, we have everything we need to gain a lot of volume, a lot of scale, and put Brazil on a different level," Ferreira said.


Reuters
18 minutes ago
- Reuters
Oil pares gains on possible US OK for Chevron to renew Venezuelan operations
HOUSTON, July 24 (Reuters) - Oil pared gains on Thursday afternoon following a Reuters report that U.S. President Donald Trump's administration may allow Chevron to resume operations in Venezuela. Brent crude futures were up 26 cents, or 0.38%, to $68.77 a barrel by 1:14 p.m. CDT (1814 GMT). U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 44 cents, or 0.67%, to $65.69 per barrel. Earlier in the session, WTI had been up more than a dollar and Brent crude came near that level. "The news about Chevron being able to go back into Venezuela and get oil going again just took the knees out of the market," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital LLC. Kilduff said the market does not expect the Trump administration will open up Venezuela to other U.S. oil companies. "This is a unique one-off," he said. Oil was stronger on news Russia was planning to cut gasoline exports to all but a few allies and nations Mongolia, with which it has supply agreements. "Russia looking to cut off gasoline exports gave the market a boost," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst with Price Futures Group. "The market was looking for a reason to go higher." Early in the session, futures gained on the previous day's report of a U.S. crude inventory draw and on hopes for a trade deal between the U.S. and the European Union that would lower tariffs. "The U.S. crude inventory draw and the trade efforts are adding some support to prices," said Janiv Shah, an analyst at Rystad. On Wednesday, two European diplomats said the EU and the U.S. were moving toward a trade deal that could include a 15% U.S. baseline tariff on EU imports and possible exemptions. This could pave the way for another major trade agreement following the Japan deal. Also on Wednesday, U.S. Energy Information Administration data showed crude inventories fell last week by 3.2 million barrels to 419 million barrels, far exceeding analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 1.6 million-barrel draw. Oil prices were also supported by a suspension of Azeri crude exports from the Turkish port of Ceyhan and a brief halt to loadings at Russia's main Black Sea ports which has since been resolved. BP (BP.L), opens new tab said organic chlorides were detected in some of the oil tanks in the terminal at Ceyhan, adding that oil loading continued from some of the tanks with chloride levels assessed to be within normal specifications, while export activities via the BTC pipeline also continued. Traders will watch for further news on loadings from Ceyhan and Novorossiysk, which together make up around 2.5% of global oil supply at 2.5 million barrels per day, according to Reuters calculations based on loading data from the region. Russia and Ukraine held peace talks in Istanbul on Wednesday, discussing further prisoner swaps, though the two sides remain far apart on ceasefire terms and a possible meeting of their leaders. "Next to watch would be the demand indicators as we are in the peak season and any upside or downside would impact refining margins," Rystad's Shah added.