Chinese biotech firms seek Swiss partnerships amid US tensions
Basel conference highlights growing interest in Swiss biotech collaboration as Chinese companies pivot away from US market
Basel conference highlights growing interest in Swiss biotech collaboration as Chinese companies pivot away from US market

"What we are talking about now is short term. In three or six months, it may look different again."
"Chinese companies are no longer just copying otherâs innovation but really developing their own innovation."
While global trade wars dominate the headlines, a quiet revolution is taking place in Basel. The Swiss Biotech Day shattered records this May, hosting a staggering 3,000 participantsâthe highest attendance in the event's history. Nearly half of these delegates arrived from abroad, signaling a desperate hunger for collaboration that transcends borders. Amidst this bustling crowd, a significant shift was palpable: the dramatic surge in Chinese presence.
At least 20 major Chinese biotech firms, including industry titans like WuXi AppTec and AI-pioneer XtalPi, descended on the Rhine specifically to court Swiss partners. This isn't just a networking event; it is a strategic realignment. As geopolitical ice thickens between Washington and Beijing, Chinese innovators are aggressively seeking new harbors. Switzerland, with its reputation for neutrality and scientific excellence, has emerged as the premier destination. The message from the conference floor was loud and clear: science cannot wait for politics to settle.
Uncertainty is the enemy of investment, and right now, the United States is exporting uncertainty by the boatload. Looming tariffs, drastic cuts to biomedical research funding, and volatile financial markets are forcing Chinese companies to rethink their dependence on American partnerships. In stark contrast, Switzerland stands as a beacon of predictability.
"China really wants to explore more long term and mutual trust cooperation with Switzerland and Europe," asserts Minyue Dong, a professor leading discussions on Sino-Swiss ties. The logic is undeniable: drug development is a marathon, not a sprint. It takes 10 to 15 years to bring a product to market. Michael Altorfer, CEO of the Swiss Biotech Association, dismisses current tensions as "short term" noise. For Swiss biotech firmsâoften small, agile, and capital-hungryâthe influx of Chinese interest offers a stable alternative to the erratic American market. The pivot is real, and it is accelerating.
Forget the outdated narrative of China as a land of "fast followers." That era is dead. Today, Chinese firms are the undisputed global leaders in developing antibody drug conjugates (ADCs)âthe cutting-edge missiles of cancer therapy. They are also pioneering the integration of artificial intelligence into early drug discovery, moving at a speed that has left many Western competitors scrambling to keep up.
"Chinese companies are no longer just copying otherâs innovation but really developing their own innovation," declares Stella Gu of Tigermed. This is not hubris; it is a fact backed by data. Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan recently described Chinese innovation as a "wake-up call" for the entire industry. The dynamic has flipped: Swiss companies are no longer just exporting expertise; they are actively hunting for Chinese technology to fuel their own pipelines. The collaboration is now a meeting of equals, driven by a mutual need to dominate the next generation of medicine.
While politicians talk, businesses sign checks. The financial commitment from Swiss pharma giants to Chinese partnerships is nothing short of massive. In January alone, Roche inked a deal worth up to $1 billion with Suzhou-based Innovent Biologics. This isn't a tentative experiment; it is a billion-dollar vote of confidence in Chinese capability.
Novartis is equally aggressive, currently constructing a $100 million factory in China dedicated to advanced radioligand cancer therapies. These are critical, strategic investments designed to secure access to the world's fastest-growing innovation ecosystem. Despite the geopolitical headwinds, Swiss heavyweights are doubling down. They recognize that in the high-stakes game of global biotechnology, ignoring the Chinese market is not just a riskâit is a strategic suicide. As the US turns inward, the Swiss-China axis is hardening into a powerful financial and scientific reality.