Last month, the medtech team at Mercer Capital attended the 2025 Musculoskeletal New Ventures Conference, where discussions among founders, venture investors, strategic acquirers, and advisors converged on a consistent message: activity in the industry is increasingly shaped by discipline around clinical differentiation, capital efficiency, and strategic coherence. Innovation continues across the ecosystem, though expectations around execution, funding, and exit visibility have tightened.
For early-stage companies, investors described an environment that supports new ventures, albeit with a greater emphasis on efficient capital deployment. Successful companies are pursuing leaner development strategies with earlier clinical or regulatory wins, rather than broad, capital-intensive pipelines. Incremental innovation, particularly in mature segments such as orthopedics, has been attractive when paired with platform scalability or data-enabled (AI) differentiation. Management quality and adaptability remain critical at this stage.
In contrast, as other observers have also noted, venture capital has favored select growth-stage and later-stage deals. Investments flowed into companies able to articulate coherent clinical and commercial strategies aligned with the priorities of large, strategic buyers. Clear narratives around end-market adoption, strategic fit, and integration potential have tended to lead to higher valuations across observed transactions.
Among large, established medtech companies, portfolio optimization was an ongoing effort. For public companies, exposure to higher-growth segments has increasingly supported better valuation multiples and relative equity performance. In response, strategic acquirers such as Stryker, Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Johnson & Johnson have tuned their portfolios through targeted acquisitions, divestitures, and capital redeployment. For example, Stryker’s acquisition of Inari Medical reflects the appeal of the high-growth interventional markets with strong clinical differentiation, while its divestment of the spine business demonstrates an effort to exit slower-growth or less strategically differentiated segments. Similarly, Johnson & Johnson’s acquisitions of Shockwave Medical and V-Wave in 2024 augmented a cardiovascular platform focused on markets with long-term growth potential, while the announced separation of its DePuy Synthes orthopedics business signals a broader effort to simplify and sharpen strategic focus within its portfolio.
Overall healthcare IPO activity in 2025 was broadly in line with 2024 levels, with issuance concentrated among higher-quality medtech and life sciences companies rather than reflecting a broad-based market reopening. Offerings such as Caris Life Sciences, which combined scale, revenue growth, and a differentiated data-driven platform, were relatively well received, suggesting that the IPO window remains available but is selective.
Across various company stages and transactions, 2025 activity in medtech reflected a consistent emphasis on disciplined, capital-efficient growth. Whether among early-stage investments prioritizing focused development, later-stage companies articulating clear strategic fit, or large strategics actively reshaping portfolios, the common thread has been the pursuit of durable clinical differentiation and well-defined paths to scale or exit.