In a new study, an experimental obesity drug from Novo Nordisk, CagriSema allowed people to lose more than 20% of their body weight, on average, a result that caused the Danish company's stock price to fall by as much as 29%. Yes, fall. For anyone not following the heated race for obesity drug dominance, it may look like we're living upside-down. After all, if this data were unveiled three years ago, the market reaction would have been wildly different. The stock might have gone up and headlines would have heralded an advance in the fight against obesity. But we're in a new era of obesity medicine. The bar for success, once modest, has soared—especially so for CagriSema. Let me explain.
Though Novo will make mind-blowing money from its existing obesity drugs in the coming years (its GLP-1 drugs are likely to become pharma's most lucrative franchise next year), CagriSema was seen as essential for continued growth in 2030 and beyond. And the study suggests it may not be the contender investors had hoped for.
This story is from the January 02, 2025 edition of Mint Chennai.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 02, 2025 edition of Mint Chennai.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
An ode to the Maximum City of hopes and heartbreak
Murzban F. Shroff's new collection of Mumbai stories chronicles the decline of the city, while celebrating its resilience
From red lights to green: DPI for businesses will spur job creation
Employer Aadhaar and Digilocker will apply Digital Public Infrastructure to compliance and help create high-wage jobs
HDFC Bank NPAs rise amid Q3 agriculture loan defaults
The lender's profit growth was weighed down by asset quality issues and slow loan growth
Address India's worsening urban groundwater crisis
We require innovative solutions that use technology to prevent its depletion and contamination
Netflix surges past 300 mn subscribers
Netflix on Tuesday said it added nearly 19 million subscribers during the holiday season to finish out last year with more than 300 million subscribers.
Dixon Tech: A flurry of acquisitions, capacity expansions
Upwardly mobile
NMC seeks to tighten rules for hiring medical college faculty
India's apex medical education regulatory has proposed new eligibility qualifications for teachers to improve standards as it seeks to weed out ghost faculty and incompetent teachers.
RIL arm acquires sauces brand SIL
Reliance Consumer Products Ltd (RCPL), the consumer goods arm of Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), announced on Wednesday its acquisition of SIL, a food brand known for sauces and condiments.
Shareholders nix Gokaldas Esop plan
Apparel maker Gokaldas Exports' plan to reward its top executive with a generous stock grant has been blocked by the company's institutional shareholders, more than half of whom voted against the resolution enabling its latest employee stock option plan (Esop).
Garth Hudson wove a musical spell on listeners
Hudson was the last surviving member of the influential rock group The Band