On May 15, 2026, HarbourVest Partners disclosed a new position in Generate Biomedicines (NASDAQ:GENB), acquiring 1,722,210 shares in the first quarter. The estimated transaction value is $21.03 million, based on quarterly average pricing.
What happened
According to a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing published May 15, 2026, HarbourVest Partners took a new position in Generate Biomedicines during the first quarter of 2026, adding 1,722,210 shares. The estimated transaction value was $21.03 million, based on the average closing price over the quarter. The position was valued at $21.53 million as of March 31, 2026, encompassing both share purchases and price changes.
What else to know
-
This was a new position for the fund, with the post-trade stake representing 21% of 13F reportable AUM.
-
Top holdings after the filing:
-
NYSE: KLAR: $65.76 million (65.2% of AUM)
-
NASDAQ: GENB: $21.53 million (21.3% of AUM)
-
NYSE: YMM: $7.95 million (7.9% of AUM)
-
NASDAQ: CAMP: $5.61 million (5.6% of AUM)
-
NASDAQ: IPSC: $65,581 (0.1% of AUM)
-
-
As of Friday, GENB shares were priced at $13.12, down about 12.5% from their February IPO price of $16 per share.
Company overview
|
Metric |
Value |
|---|---|
|
Price (as of Friday) |
$13.12 |
|
Market Capitalization |
$2 billion |
|
Revenue (TTM) |
$30.3 million |
|
Net Income (TTM) |
($222.9 million) |
Company snapshot
-
Generate Biomedicines develops protein-based therapeutics, including GB-0895 for severe asthma, GB-4362 as an MMAE payload neutralizer, and GB-5267, a MUC16 CAR-T cell therapy.
-
The firm operates a platform-driven business model that leverages machine learning and computational biology to design novel protein drugs.
-
It is headquartered in Somerville, Massachusetts, with a focus on integrating computational innovation and scalable laboratory processes.
Generate Biomedicines, Inc. applies advanced machine learning to accelerate the discovery and development of new protein therapeutics, integrating computational tools with scalable laboratory processes. The company’s strategy centers on its proprietary Generate Platform, which enables the design of novel drugs that address unmet medical needs beyond the reach of traditional methods.
What this transaction means for investors
When a new position immediately becomes more than 20% of a fund’s reported portfolio, it makes sense to think it signals strong conviction. Generate is still early in its commercial journey, but management spent the latest quarter highlighting progress across multiple programs. Its lead candidate, GB-0895, continues advancing through Phase 3 trials for severe asthma, while oncology candidates GB-4362 and GB-5267 are expected to begin key clinical activities later this year. CEO Mike Nally said the company made “strong progress” across both its clinical pipeline and underlying AI-driven drug discovery platform.
The financial picture also helps explain why investors may be willing to look past post-IPO volatility. Generate ended the first quarter with $516.6 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities after raising $369.3 million in its March IPO, providing an expected runway into the first half of 2028. Meanwhile, revenue slipped to $7.2 million from $8.8 million a year earlier, and the firm’s net loss widened to $61.7 million as it ramped up investment in late-stage clinical programs.
Ultimately, post-IPO volatility might deter some, but long-term investors should remain focused on execution and outcomes, and in this case, that means whether Generate’s machine-learning-powered platform can consistently produce successful medicines.