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This Biotech Was Quietly Bought Before a $58 Per Share Takeout
On February 17, 2026, FCPM III Services B.V. disclosed a buy of 1,489,096 RAPT Therapeutics (RAPT +0.00%) shares, an estimated $46.24 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
What happened
According to a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing dated February 17, 2026, FCPM III Services B.V. increased its stake in RAPT Therapeutics (RAPT +0.00%) by 1,489,096 shares during the fourth quarter. The estimated value of the new shares acquired was $46.24 million, based on the average unadjusted closing price for the quarter. At quarter-end, the total value of the position had risen by $53.22 million, reflecting both the trading activity and changes in RAPT’s share price.
What else to know
Company snapshot
RAPT Therapeutics, Inc. is a clinical-stage biotechnology company specializing in the development of oral small molecule drugs for cancer and inflammatory conditions. The company’s strategy centers on advancing novel CCR4 antagonists and kinase inhibitors through clinical trials to address significant unmet needs in immunology and oncology.
What this transaction means for investors
This trade stands out because the entire setup changed after the buying was already done at quarter’s end. GSK and RAPT’s acquisition agreement and closing both landed this quarter, meaning the position wasn’t built on deal certainty but rather on underlying conviction in the asset. What looked like a clinical-stage biotech bet quickly turned into a takeout arbitrage with a defined ceiling.
The numbers tell a clean story. Shares were effectively bought around the low-$30 range and then repriced to $58 per share as part of a roughly $2.2 billion acquisition, a near 90% premium that locked in gains almost immediately.
Strategically, GSK was acquiring ozureprubart, a late-stage anti-IgE therapy targeting food allergies, a market with significant unmet need and large patient populations. That kind of asset quality explains why the deal cleared at such a premium.
Within a portfolio dominated by high-conviction biotech names, this looks less like luck and more like process. You build positions in assets that could attract strategic interest, and occasionally the timeline compresses.