Sonntag, 29. März 2026

The Daily

A curated briefing

Wien heute: Light rain +5°C (feels +1°C), ↘28 km/h wind, 75% humidity, sunrise 06:39, sunset 19:19.

Biotech & Pharma

Novartis agrees to buy Excellergy for up to $2B

Novartis is paying $1.1B upfront to acquire US biotech Excellergy, with up to $900M in milestone payments tied to development and regulatory goals. The strategic angle is allergy: Novartis says the deal deepens its next-gen anti-IgE pipeline, building on the franchise around Xolair. If you zoom out, this is Big Pharma buying “shots on goal” in immune modulation while the market is still re-pricing post-GLP-1 growth expectations. The execution question: allergy is crowded, but anti‑IgE still has room for better dosing, durability, and patient convenience.
Source: Reuters

Otsuka to acquire Transcend Therapeutics in a $1.225B deal centered on an MDMA analog

Otsuka is buying Transcend Therapeutics for $1.225B, putting a big flag in the ground for next-wave neuropsychiatry assets. The lead program is an MDMA analog designed to preserve therapeutic benefit while dialing down the classic “club drug” baggage: fewer acute side effects, less abuse potential, cleaner pharmacology. The deal is also a bet on regulatory appetite for novel mental-health mechanisms after the field’s recent whiplash. For competitors, the signal is clear: Big Pharma is still willing to pay up for differentiated CNS shots — but only if the story is tight.
Source: Fierce Biotech

Novartis’ own framing: “next-generation anti-IgE innovation”

In its announcement, Novartis positions Excellergy as a way to extend its allergy leadership with next-gen anti‑IgE approaches — not just a one-off asset buy. The release repeats the $1.1B upfront + up to $900M milestones structure and leans on the idea that anti‑IgE biology still has meaningful headroom (patient subgroups, durability, administration). This matters because it signals how Novartis wants the market to value the move: not a single-asset roll of the dice, but a pipeline wedge. If you watch immunology M&A, this is the kind of language that often precedes follow-on tuck-ins.
Source: Novartis

Science

New Zealand cave excavation identifies 16 species — including 10 new to science

A cave excavation in New Zealand turned into a biodiversity time capsule: researchers report remains from 16 species, with 10 described as new to science. Beyond the headline number, the key point is how caves preserve a skewed but information‑dense record of local ecosystems — especially for small vertebrates that rarely fossilize well in open environments. This kind of work doesn’t just “add species”; it tightens timelines for habitat change, extinction pressure, and island biogeography. The broader implication: as methods improve, under-sampled sites (caves, sinkholes, middens) can still yield big jumps in what we think we know.
Source: ScienceDaily

Nature Biomedical Engineering: foundation models are moving into cardiac imaging

A paper in Nature Biomedical Engineering points to a shift that feels inevitable: foundation-model style training is now being applied to cardiac imaging, with the goal of making segmentation and interpretation more robust across scanners, sites, and patient populations. The near-term win is practical — fewer brittle pipelines and less manual labeling for clinical workflows. The longer-term risk is also practical: validation and drift become core medical-device problems, not academic footnotes. If radiology felt like “the first big AI wave,” cardiology imaging is lining up as the second.
Source: Nature Biomedical Engineering

AI & Tech

OpenAI’s U.S. ad pilot reportedly crossed $100M in annualized revenue in ~6 weeks

Reuters reports OpenAI’s U.S. advertising pilot hit $100M+ in annualized revenue in about six weeks — a pace that suggests “ads in AI” is moving from rumor to revenue line faster than most people expected. The product logic is simple: if user attention shifts from search results to chat interfaces, the ad unit follows the attention. The hard part is trust: ads change how people read answers, especially in high-stakes queries (health, finance). The implication for the market is brutal: if OpenAI builds a real ad business, it doesn’t just compete with Google — it competes with every business that relies on search distribution.
Source: Reuters

Sony reportedly hikes PS5 price to $650

Variety reports Sony is raising the PlayStation 5 price to $650 — a move that’s hard to pull off this deep into a console cycle unless supply-chain and margin math are screaming. The short-term risk is obvious: price sensitivity, slower unit velocity, and more oxygen for PC and subscription ecosystems. The strategic angle is more interesting: if Sony is willing to push hardware price, it’s implicitly betting that software, services, and platform lock-in can carry the value story. In 2026, consoles aren’t just boxes — they’re distribution rails.
Source: Variety

Faculty push back against OpenAI deals: governance is becoming the real bottleneck

Inside Higher Ed describes a familiar pattern: universities racing to sign AI partnerships, while faculty argue the deals are being made without meaningful shared governance. The conflict isn’t just ideological — it’s operational. If AI tools become embedded in teaching and research, questions about data access, IP, and vendor lock‑in stop being abstract and start affecting day-to-day work. The implication: the AI adoption curve in higher ed may be capped less by capability and more by institutional legitimacy.
Source: Inside Higher Ed

Kids Vienna

Ostern im Verkehrsmuseum Remise (4.–5.4.2026, 10–18 Uhr)

Kurzliste: Bastel- & Malstation • Osterhase „WiLi“ • Ostereier-Suchspiel • Ostermärchen (12:30/14:00) • „Goldenes Osterei“ (11:00/15:00) • Oldtimerfahrten (12–17 Uhr). Die Wiener Linien machen aus der Remise ein Familien-Osterfestival — mit klaren Zeiten und genug „Programmanker“, damit man nicht nur herumläuft. Praktisch: Kinder unter 6 gratis, 7–15 Jahre: 2 € (Erwachsene 12 €). Und: Wer Simulatoren mag, kann dort wieder U‑Bahn/Bus „fahren“.
Source: wien.gv.at

DIY: Ostereier marmorieren (Nagellack‑Trick, schnell & hübsch)

Kurzliste: Wasserbad • 1–2 Nagellackfarben • Holzstäbchen • Eier • Küchenpapier. WIENXTRA Kinderinfo zeigt marmorierte Eier mit Nagellack: Farbe ins Wasser, kurz „ziehen“, Ei eintauchen — fertig. Der Post ist datiert mit 25.02.2026 und ist ideal, wenn man am Wochenende noch schnell Deko braucht (und Kinder Lust auf Experiment‑Chaos haben). Tipp: Arbeitsplatz großflächig abdecken — das ist keine „saubere Basteltechnik“.
Source: WIENXTRA Kinderinfo

Wien – Kultur & Essen

Bellaria Kino eröffnet am 16. April wieder — modernisiert, aber mit Repertoire‑DNA

Kurzliste: Wiedereröffnung 16. April • 116 Sitzplätze • neuer Barbereich • Klassiker + „Best of“ aktuelles Kino. Nach langer Umbauphase sperrt das Bellaria (hinterm Volkstheater) wieder auf — im 115. Jubiläumsjahr. Herzstück ist ein technisch modernisierter Saal mit 116 Sitzplätzen, dazu ein neu eingerichteter Barbereich als Treffpunkt „über das Filmerlebnis hinaus“. Programmatisch: zurück zu Repertoire, inklusive Filmklassiker aus 100 Jahren Filmgeschichte.
Source: wien.ORF.at

La Dorée: neue Bar‑&-Club‑Melange in der Jasomirgottstraße

Kurzliste: Jasomirgottstraße 3a • Tagesbar + (später) Gastgarten • 1. Stock = Club • Betreiber: Jaso 3 Gastro GmbH. Gault&Millau beschreibt La Dorée als „goldenes“ Bar/Club‑Konzept wenige Schritte vom Stephansplatz: unten Tagesbar (mit geplantem Gastgarten), oben Party. Hinter dem Projekt stehen Joachim Natschläger und Gerhard Komarek (u.a. Ziizou, Maya Garden). Kleiner Reality‑Check: Der Artikel ist von 19.05.2025 — als Tipp trotzdem brauchbar, wenn man gerade eine zentrale „später wird’s laut“-Option sucht.
Source: Gault&Millau

Travel

Matera’s ancient caves, modern rebirth: 6,000+ years of history turned into hotels and restaurants

Matera (Basilicata) is one of those places that looks fictional until you stand in it: cave dwellings carved into a cliffside, with layers of occupation going back more than 6,000 years. CBS frames it as a “town reborn,” where some cliffside caves are now restaurants, bars, and even luxury cave hotels — a pragmatic remix of archaeology and tourism economics. The planning takeaway is pacing: it’s worth at least one full day and a night, because the place changes completely after sunset. Also: it’s southern Italy without the coast crowds — but with the same photogenic chaos.
Source: CBS News

Visit Puglia: quick anchor points for planning (plus prices for local experiences)

If you want a fast “where do we even start?” map for Apulia, Visit Puglia’s English hub is surprisingly usable: Bari, Lecce, Brindisi, Taranto, Gargano, Valle d’Itria — all one click away. It also lists bookable experiences with hard numbers (e.g., a private boat tour in Polignano a Mare for €385, a SUP rental for €24.75, an olive mill + winery experience in Fasano for €88). It’s not journalism — it’s logistics — but for trip planning that’s often the bottleneck.
Source: visit.puglia.it

NBA

Hawks 123, Kings 113 — Snyder hits 500 wins as Atlanta closes strong

Nickeil Alexander‑Walker dropped 27 points as the Hawks held off a late Sacramento tie and finished the job, giving Quin Snyder his 500th career win. Atlanta went 8‑for‑12 from three in the fourth — turning a nervous finish into a shooting clinic. Jalen Johnson had 26 points and 10 assists, and Jock Landale added 19 points and 13 rebounds. The Kings fell to 19–56 and keep looking like a roster held together with tape.
Source: AP News

76ers 118, Hornets 114 — Maxey (26) and Embiid (29) do the damage

Philadelphia edged Charlotte 118–114 with a very “stars do star things” statline: Tyrese Maxey scored 26 (plus 8 assists), while Joel Embiid went for 29 and hit 10 free throws. Paul George added 26 and a huge 13 rebounds. On the Hornets’ side, Brandon Miller posted 29 and LaMelo Ball had 20 with 8 assists — but Charlotte’s volume threes didn’t cash.
Source: NBA.com