
Biotech Hangout Episode 166 - December 12, 2025
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Dec 12, 2025 John Stanford, host of the Making Medicines podcast, brings his insights on biotech policy from Washington, DC. He discusses the National Defense Authorization Act and its implications, highlighting biotech as a national security asset. Rising valuations and an optimistic outlook for IPOs in 2026 are also covered. Other highlights include data from ASH on various treatments, including CAR-T therapies and Dyne's DMD candidate. The conversation wraps up with predictions and optimism levels for the biotech sector's future.
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Biotech Declared A National Security Asset
- The NDAA signals biotech is now a national security asset and will pull new DOD funding and attention into the sector.
- Expect a new DOD biotech office and mission-driven capital that targets synthetic bio, biomanufacturing, AI-for-drug-discovery and infectious disease.
Federal Funding Will Face New Supply-Chain Controls
- The NDAA contains a moderated Biosecure-like provision that restricts federal dollars to companies deemed "of concern."
- Companies working with federal grants must watch two emerging lists from DOD and OMB to avoid disqualification.
Watch The Two Emerging 'Company Of Concern' Lists
- Monitor the DOD-managed 1260H list and the new OMB list closely if you take federal funding or partner with CDMOs/CROs.
- Engage early with the White House process to argue against being designated a "company of concern."
