Assembly Biosciences has emerged from the EASL Congress in Barcelona with more than just data. The biotech firm capped a $115 million capital increase by unveiling plans to take its lead oral candidate ABI-6250 into two new rare liver diseases, while a key partnership with Gilead Sciences inches toward a major commitment.
The follow-on offering, initially pegged at $100 million, was upsized after underwriters fully exercised their greenshoe option. A total of 3,924,624 shares sold at $26.50 apiece, including 566,040 additional shares from the overallotment. Alongside the common stock, the company issued pre-funded warrants for up to 415,000 shares at $26.499 each — essentially the offering price minus a nominal $0.001 exercise price — to an existing investor. Net proceeds stand at roughly $107.4 million after fees and expenses, earmarked for clinical development of its viral and liver disease pipeline and general corporate purposes.
The capital arrives as Assembly Bio pushes ABI-6250, an oral NTCP receptor inhibitor, beyond hepatitis delta. Phase 1a data presented at EASL, led by Dr. Edward J. Gane, showed a safety and activity profile that management deems sufficient to advance into Phase 2. The company plans to launch a Phase 2 study in chronic HDV patients in the fourth quarter of 2026. More striking is the drug’s expanded potential: because NTCP also transports bile acids into liver cells, Assembly Bio intends to test ABI-6250 in primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) — both characterized by bile acid accumulation and liver inflammation. Following a pre-IND meeting with the FDA, a Phase 2 basket study for both indications is slated for the first quarter of 2027.
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Meanwhile, the herpesvirus program, run with Gilead Sciences, is nearing a critical juncture. Phase 1b studies for two helicase-primase inhibitors, ABI-5366 and ABI-1179, targeting recurrent genital herpes, have wrapped up. Gilead has already exercised its option to license the program, and by mid-2026 Assembly Bio must decide whether to co-fund 40% of U.S. costs and share in U.S. profits, pending Gilead’s formal development plan.
Pro-forma cash and equivalents now stand at approximately $226.6 million, providing runway through 2028. The share price sits at $27.40, just above the offering’s $26.50 price but roughly 29% below the 52-week high of $38.50. Still, the stock has nearly doubled over the past year, reflecting the broader context for a capital raise executed at a relatively favorable window.
With fresh cash, validated early data, and a broadened indication set, Assembly Bio has used its Barcelona platform to reposition itself as a multi-indication liver disease player — and to give investors a clearer picture of what the next 18 months might deliver.
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