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#TradFi交易分享挑战 MRNA is ignited by cruise news, but what’s truly worth watching isn’t this virus
On May 12th, a piece of news pushed Moderna (MRNA) back into the market spotlight:
A U.S. passenger on the MV Hondius cruise was diagnosed with Andes strain hantavirus. The name sounds unfamiliar, but it has a very compelling point: the Andes strain is one of the few hantavirus strains believed to be transmissible between humans. For the market, these keywords are enough: cruise, virus, human transmission, Moderna.
MRNA’s stock was once emotionally driven during the trading day, but after the close, looking again, the stock price returned to around $52.88. It’s not a simple story of “virus news triggers a continuous surge in stock.” Quite the opposite, this pullback is quite interesting. It indicates that the market also understands: this hantavirus itself is unlikely to be a large commercial market. So why are we still watching MRNA? Because the value of this news isn’t in how much revenue it can generate, but in it reminding the market of one thing: Moderna is not just a COVID-memory company; it remains an mRNA platform company.
What is the market really looking at this time
If we only consider the cruise news, this story isn’t big. Hantavirus is a serious public health event, but from a commercial perspective, it’s not influenza, not COVID, nor a routine vaccine market with a large immunized population. It’s unrealistic to treat it as Moderna’s new revenue pillar. But MRNA has recently regained some heat, not just because of this news.
Over the past month, several more important developments have occurred:
Q1 2026 revenue of $389M, exceeding market expectations, indicating that there isn’t a complete halt after COVID.
Positive Phase III data for mRNA flu vaccine, with over 40,000 people aged 50 and above in trials showing better performance than traditional flu vaccines. mCOMBRIAX approved in the EU, a combined COVID + flu mRNA vaccine.
Longer follow-up data for mRNA-4157 personalized cancer vaccine, which we believe is the most worth watching part.
So, the hantavirus news is more like a matchstick. It ignited attention, but whether it can really catch fire depends on whether Moderna’s platform has already shifted from a COVID-only story to longer-term directions like flu, combination vaccines, and cancer vaccines.
The truly significant story is mRNA-4157
From our analysis this time, the most worth dissecting about Moderna isn’t hantavirus, but mRNA-4157.
This is a personalized cancer vaccine developed in partnership with Merck. Simply put, it’s not a one-size-fits-all vaccine, but it identifies each patient’s “tumor fingerprint” from their tumor and customizes an mRNA vaccine for that individual, enabling the immune system to recognize cancer cells more precisely. It sounds sci-fi, but the data is no longer just conceptual.
Merck’s official five-year follow-up data from KEYNOTE-942 shows: mRNA-4157 + Keytruda reduces the risk of recurrence or death by 49% compared to Keytruda alone in high-risk melanoma patients. This number is significant. Since Keytruda is Merck’s biggest oncology drug, if subsequent Phase III trials of mRNA-4157 can replicate this effect, it’s not just Moderna’s story but also Merck’s story of extending the commercial life of Keytruda.
This is why we believe this line is worth continuing to watch.
Breaking down the mRNA line, mRNA isn’t a single company but an entire industry chain.
At the top are platform companies: Moderna, BioNTech. They are responsible for turning mRNA technology into products. Nearby are big pharma partners: Merck, involved in personalized cancer vaccines via mRNA-4157; Pfizer, still exposed to mRNA through BioNTech collaborations.
Below are manufacturing supply chains: companies like Repligen, Danaher/Cytiva providing bioprocessing materials and equipment. If mRNA truly diversifies into multiple products, manufacturing capacity will need to expand accordingly.
Looking further, there are impacted players: Sanofi and GSK are key players in traditional flu vaccines. If mRNA flu vaccines really come to market and perform better, the moat of traditional flu vaccines will be gradually eroded.
So today’s question isn’t “Should I chase MRNA?” A better question is: if the market re-prices the mRNA platform, which layer will it prioritize?
If not focusing on Moderna itself, which layers should we watch?
We prefer to dissect three layers.
The first layer is Merck (MRK). Merck is a partner in mRNA-4157, and its Keytruda is the world’s largest oncology drug. MRK has fallen about 8.4% over the past month, now about 11.1% below its 52-week high. The market still worries about patent cliffs for Keytruda, but if mRNA-4157’s Phase III data can hold up, it could help extend Keytruda’s combination therapy value. This doesn’t mean MRK will necessarily rise immediately on MRNA news, but it’s a layer worth observing: it’s not driven by emotion like MRNA, but the mechanism is clear.
The second layer is Repligen (RGEN). RGEN supplies bioprocessing materials. It’s about 34.1% below its 52-week high, and has fallen about 9.3% over the past year. These companies don’t tell the most glamorous platform stories, but if mRNA products truly expand from a COVID-only product to multiple products, manufacturing will become more important again. The question is clear: RGEN isn’t cheap, with a forward P/E around 45x, so it can’t just be justified by “it’s fallen a lot.” Future performance depends on real orders and demand recovery in earnings reports.
The third layer is Pfizer (PFE). PFE isn’t a high-volatility stock, but it still has mRNA exposure through BioNTech. Its forward P/E is about 9x, more defensive. It won’t jump like a small stock, but in the mRNA theme, it offers a different risk profile. Not all companies benefit from this same theme. BioNTech (BNTX) is another leader in mRNA, but it faces significant post-COVID transformation pressures. Its net debt/EBITDA ratio looks poor, and such balance sheet pressures shouldn’t be ignored in biotech. Sanofi (SNY) and GSK are another kind of risk: they’re not mRNA platform beneficiaries but traditional flu vaccine incumbents. If mRNA flu vaccines continue to advance, they’ll face substitution pressures. Of course, vaccine market shifts won’t happen overnight; channels, procurement, and regulation will slow this process. That’s the value of industry chain dissection: the same news, some are bought, some are replaced, some sell tools, some just serve as emotional entry points.
How to judge this line now
Our view is: the mRNA platform theme still deserves attention, but MRNA itself is no longer suitable for short-term hype chasing. Its real points of interest now are three:
1. Whether Q1 revenue indicates platform cash flow pressures are easing;
2. Whether mRNA flu vaccines can continue to advance through regulatory approval;
3. Whether mRNA-4157’s Phase III data can sustain the strong 49% signal.
Among these, the most imaginative is mRNA-4157. But the biggest risk is here: even if Phase II data looks good, Phase III may not replicate. Biotech is different from semiconductors; demand isn’t just “a bit stronger, more orders,” but clinical data often involves one-shot outcomes. So we will continue to follow this line, but not to say “MRNA is ignited by virus news, so everyone should chase.” A more accurate way to put it: hantavirus gave the market an entry point, but mRNA-4157 is the real story that this article aims to leave behind.