GSK’s China Hepatitis B Deal Puts £2 Billion Bepirovirsen Bet in Focus

GSK’s China Hepatitis B Deal Puts £2 Billion Bepirovirsen Bet in Focus

May 13, 2026

London, May 13, 2026, 14:02 BST

  • GSK secured exclusive rights to launch its hepatitis B drug candidate, bepirovirsen, in China.
  • The deal opens the door for the drug to reach patients through CTTQ, a Sino Biopharmaceutical subsidiary with a network spanning over 5,000 medical centres.
  • Bepirovirsen stands out as an important part of GSK’s push to exceed £40 billion in yearly sales by 2031.

GSK plc is pushing for wider access to bepirovirsen in China, locking in an exclusive deal with Chia Tai Tianqing Pharmaceutical, part of Sino Biopharmaceutical. With this move, the British pharma giant aims to turn its late-stage hepatitis B candidate into a serious growth engine. CTTQ is set to manage import, distribution, hospital access, and promotion across mainland China. GSK, for its part, keeps a grip on regulatory and medical strategy.

Timing’s key here. Bepirovirsen is on the investor radar as GSK pushes to move past its traditional vaccine and HIV drug business, aiming to top £40 billion in yearly sales by 2031—a goal it stuck with after posting £7.6 billion for the first quarter. Last month, Chief Executive Luke Miels said GSK was “focused on execution and accelerating R&D,” highlighting bepirovirsen filings as evidence of momentum. GSK

China isn’t just another market here. According to GSK, around 75 million people in the country live with chronic hepatitis B, while CTTQ’s reach extends to over 5,000 medical centres. “One of China’s most pressing healthcare priorities,” is how Mike Crichton, GSK’s president international, described hepatitis B. GSK

CTTQ has agreed to purchase bepirovirsen from GSK for an initial five and a half years under specified supply terms, with an extension option built in. GSK keeps the sales on its books for any drugs provided through the partnership. No word yet on financial details.

Bepirovirsen hasn’t received approval in any country so far. The drug, an antisense oligonucleotide, is meant to disrupt the genetic code the virus relies on. According to GSK, it targets viral replication, cuts hepatitis B surface antigen levels in the bloodstream, and helps trigger an immune response.

Under a functional cure, hepatitis B virus DNA and surface antigen become undetectable for at least 24 weeks after stopping treatment. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration started priority review of GSK’s bepirovirsen back in April, aiming to issue a decision by Oct. 26, 2026. GSK pointed out that the prevailing standard of care typically calls for lifelong therapy, with functional cure rates still low.

The commercial upside could be significant, though it’s not locked in yet. According to Reuters, GSK is eyeing peak yearly sales topping £2 billion for bepirovirsen and is gearing up for a few launches before year-end. A regulatory call in China looks set for 2027.

The move lines up with a broader trend: big pharma is increasingly tapping Chinese firms for everything from R&D muscle to faster product rollouts and on-the-ground reach. This week, Bristol Myers Squibb announced new collaboration and licensing agreements with Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals, putting up possible milestone payments of as much as $15.2 billion—building on Hengrui’s previous tie-ups with Merck and GSK.

GSK has kept busy, advancing its drug pipeline and handing cash back to shareholders. The company kicked off the last phase of its £2 billion buyback on Monday—this fifth tranche could total around £180 million. So far, GSK has bought back 114.4 million shares for roughly £1.82 billion.

Still, the China deal leaves the core risk untouched. Everything from approval and reimbursement to pricing and physician adoption needs to line up, and GSK has already warned that forecasts might end up far from reality. Hospital access and provincial reimbursement drive drug adoption in China; CTTQ brings clout, but that alone doesn’t seal the outcome.

GSK faces a crucial test: can bepirovirsen shift from just a strong filing to a steady source of revenue? The China agreement opens that possibility. Investors remain focused on approvals, numbers, and how sales actually play out.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

Stock Market Today

  • Macquarie Group Shares Near 52-Week High as Buyback Ends and Employee Buying Completes
    June 28, 2026, 10:36 AM EDT. Macquarie Group's stock (ASX:MQG) closed at A$249.36, just 1.9% below its 52-week high of A$254.31. Recent buying from its employee equity plan, totaling A$734 million, and a completed A$1.013 billion share buyback program have removed a significant demand buffer. The buyback ended in May, with share purchases averaging A$189.80, while employee purchases averaged A$238.80. As a result, about 2.2% of shares are no longer supported by these factors. Despite this, the stock has risen 22.7% year-to-date and trades near the consensus analyst target price of A$250.14, maintaining an 'outperform' rating. Macquarie reported a 30% increase in FY26 net profit to A$4.847 billion, driven largely by international income, cementing its strong earnings. The S&P/ASX 200 index ended the week down 0.73%.