Eli Lilly (LLY +4.13%) stock, maker of the Mounjaro and Zepbound GLP-1 weight loss drugs, enjoyed a modest bounce on Monday, rising 3.6% through 10:30 a.m. ET on some good news for Lilly… and some terrible news for rival **Novo Nordisk **(NVO 16.29%).
Image source: Getty Images.
Novo vs. Lilly
Novo Nordisk first: This morning, the Danish drugmaker, and inventor of the semaglutide-based Wegovy and Ozempic GLP-1 drugs, announced clinical trial results of its new drug CagriSema (a 50-50 mix of amylin analog cagrilintide and Novo’s semaglutide glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist).
After 84 weeks’ use, Novo reported that patients lost 23% of their body weight with CagriSema – versus 25.5% with Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide. Simply put, Novo’s new drug underperformed Lilly’s existing drug, giving Lilly the advantage.
And that’s not all.
In separate news this morning, Lilly announced that it’s launching a new delivery system for Zepbound: KwikPen. It’s nothing too revolutionary – basically just a bigger syringe --. Still, it will allow Zepbound users to buy a full month’s supply of the drug in a single pen that can be used to administer the medication in fourths, one shot per week (as opposed to four separate pens, each used weekly).
Expand
NYSE: LLY
Eli Lilly
Today’s Change
(4.13%) $41.72
Current Price
$1051.24
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$952B
Day’s Range
$1034.00 - $1055.47
52wk Range
$623.78 - $1133.95
Volume
1.3M
Avg Vol
3.3M
Gross Margin
83.04%
Dividend Yield
0.62%
What does this mean for Eli Lilly stock?
Eli Lilly will keep the price of Zepbound at $299 per month for the lowest dose. Patients opting to use KwikPen for their GLP-1 doses instead of single-dose autoinjectors (or single-dose vials injected with an ordinary syringe) will benefit from having fewer devices to keep track of. _Lilly _may benefit from saving money on producing fewer syringes.
Net-net, it’s probably only a small savings for the pharmaceuticals giant, which did $4.2 billion in Zepbound sales last quarter. The bigger news for Lilly today is Novo’s flub on CagriSema.
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Why Eli Lilly Stock Just Popped
Eli Lilly (LLY +4.13%) stock, maker of the Mounjaro and Zepbound GLP-1 weight loss drugs, enjoyed a modest bounce on Monday, rising 3.6% through 10:30 a.m. ET on some good news for Lilly… and some terrible news for rival **Novo Nordisk **(NVO 16.29%).
Image source: Getty Images.
Novo vs. Lilly
Novo Nordisk first: This morning, the Danish drugmaker, and inventor of the semaglutide-based Wegovy and Ozempic GLP-1 drugs, announced clinical trial results of its new drug CagriSema (a 50-50 mix of amylin analog cagrilintide and Novo’s semaglutide glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist).
After 84 weeks’ use, Novo reported that patients lost 23% of their body weight with CagriSema – versus 25.5% with Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide. Simply put, Novo’s new drug underperformed Lilly’s existing drug, giving Lilly the advantage.
And that’s not all.
In separate news this morning, Lilly announced that it’s launching a new delivery system for Zepbound: KwikPen. It’s nothing too revolutionary – basically just a bigger syringe --. Still, it will allow Zepbound users to buy a full month’s supply of the drug in a single pen that can be used to administer the medication in fourths, one shot per week (as opposed to four separate pens, each used weekly).
Expand
NYSE: LLY
Eli Lilly
Today’s Change
(4.13%) $41.72
Current Price
$1051.24
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$952B
Day’s Range
$1034.00 - $1055.47
52wk Range
$623.78 - $1133.95
Volume
1.3M
Avg Vol
3.3M
Gross Margin
83.04%
Dividend Yield
0.62%
What does this mean for Eli Lilly stock?
Eli Lilly will keep the price of Zepbound at $299 per month for the lowest dose. Patients opting to use KwikPen for their GLP-1 doses instead of single-dose autoinjectors (or single-dose vials injected with an ordinary syringe) will benefit from having fewer devices to keep track of. _Lilly _may benefit from saving money on producing fewer syringes.
Net-net, it’s probably only a small savings for the pharmaceuticals giant, which did $4.2 billion in Zepbound sales last quarter. The bigger news for Lilly today is Novo’s flub on CagriSema.