Camille MacMillin/STAT

Allison DeAngelis is the East Coast biotech and venture capital reporter at STAT, reporting where scientific ideas and money meet. She is also co-host of the weekly biotech podcast, The Readout Loud. You can reach Allison on Signal at AllisonDeAngelis.01.

For decades, venture capitalists have relied on a tried-and-true recipe to make money in biotech: Start with compelling scientific research — usually out of a U.S. university lab — add a dash of veteran executives from a pharmaceutical goliath or big biotech, and finish with tens of millions of dollars. The approach has led to scores of new medicines, successful companies, and financial returns for VC firms and their investors. 

Now, it’s being disrupted. 

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In the aftermath of biotech’s Covid-era rally and subsequent decline, the industry has been startled to find that Chinese scientists are conducting innovative research, faster and at lower costs, than their U.S. counterparts. In the United States and elsewhere, meanwhile, investors are being wooed by artificial intelligence, drawing attention and dollars away from biotech.

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