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Can Eli Lilly become the first $1tn drugmaker?

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Can Eli Lilly become the first tn drugmaker?

Times are good at Eli Lilly. Wall Street’s insatiable appetite for weight-loss drug stocks looks set to turn the company into the world’s first $1tn drugmaker by market value.

But war stories about gloomier times are never far away when you run a pharmaceutical company. In the late 2000s, Eli Lilly’s share price neared all-time lows as patents of its blockbuster psychiatric drugs — chief among them Prozac, Zyprexa and Cymbalta — expired.

Consolidation was then sweeping the industry, recalls chief executive Dave Ricks, a 25-year veteran, and Eli Lilly was at risk of becoming “the back end of a hyphen to someone else”. The wheel of fortune has since turned. The company’s main problem is building production lines fast enough to meet demand for its blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound, part of a new class of drugs known as GLP-1s.

The drugmaker has invested $20bn in manufacturing facilities over the past four years, and on Wednesday said it was spending a further $4.5bn on building a production facility for drugs in clinical trial in its home state of Indiana. The pool of possible patients is one of the largest of any drug in history: there are more than 100mn US adults with obesity and 1bn people worldwide.

“Everyone has a biomarker in their bathroom, it’s called a scale,” says Ricks, speaking from a production facility under construction on the site of Eli Lilly’s Indianapolis headquarters. “So many people get a benefit, and they get it pretty quickly, and so then there’s a consumer interest cycle that is pretty powerful.”

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With the most potent weight-loss shot and a pipeline of 11 experimental treatments, including what is widely expected to be the first approved small molecule GLP-1 pill, Eli Lilly stands to be the biggest winner in a market that is projected to grow to $130bn a year in peak sales by the end of the decade.

But Ricks is far from complacent. He spends much of his time working to boost manufacturing capacity to outcompete rival Novo Nordisk. Meanwhile, Eli Lilly is fighting off competition from copycat weight-loss drugs and other drug developers entering the lucrative field, and coming under increasing pressure from politicians and patients over the price of its treatments.

Investors are also becoming wary over the company’s frothy valuation, which stood at $842bn as of market close on Monday, or 54-fold higher than projected earnings over the next 12 months, a height never reached before in the industry.

“Everybody is jumping blindly on [Eli] Lilly and all these stocks so they will keep grinding up but they are priced for perfection,” says one top-10 shareholder. “If investors get scared about the 10 other players with weight-loss drugs and the prospect of pricing pressure, they could be in trouble.”

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Daniel Skovronsky
Daniel Skovronsky, Eli Lilly’s chief scientific officer, says the company’s long-term mission is not only to boost its success, but also to avoid pharma’s ‘boom and bust’ cycle © AJ Mast/FT
A manufacturing facility filled with stainless steel equipment and interconnected pipes
An Eli Lilly GLP-1 manufacturing facility in Indianapolis that is set to start producing this year. Its rival Novo Nordisk shook up the market with the launch of the GLP-1 drug Ozempic in 2017 © AJ Mast/FT

But the company hopes to consolidate its position among the top 10 most valuable companies in the US by staying ahead of the competition. For Eli Lilly, this will mean pouring its extraordinary revenues into research and development to prepare for when its weight-loss drugs reach the so-called patent cliff when generic competition arrives, sometime in the mid-2030s.

The tech stocks that compete for the title of most valuable company — the likes of Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia and Google — share a “stickiness with their customers . . . that the pharmaceutical industry in the past has lacked”, says Daniel Skovronsky, Eli Lilly’s chief scientific officer.

The long-term mission for the company is not just to rise to greater heights but to avoid a return to darker times by cultivating some of that consumer loyalty. “Our mission”, adds Skovronsky, “is to get out of that boom and bust cycle of pharma”.


In 2018, after Swiss drugmaker Roche turned down the rights to license a promising GLP-1 pill to treat type 2 diabetes from its sister company Chugai, a rivalry dating back more than a century boiled up once again.

Eli Lilly beat out its Danish competitor Novo Nordisk for the rights to the experimental drug after a short bidding war, paying just $50mn upfront, according to two people familiar with discussions. Novo Nordisk declined to comment.

Skovronsky could not recall whether the pill’s potential as a weight-loss treatment was even discussed at the time of the licensing deal.

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But the pill — now known as orforglipron, which looks set to be first small molecule anti-obesity pill if it launches as planned in 2026 — is one of several fronts in which Eli Lilly appears to be outmanoeuvring Novo Nordisk for supremacy in the weight-loss drug market.

“For a century, we’ve competed with [Novo Nordisk] directly or indirectly,” says Ricks. “Competition is good for consumers in that way: it speeds up things because you race, you work harder, we can iterate in ways that produce better products . . . so there has been a sort of leapfrogging.”

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In 1923, Eli Lilly was first out of the blocks with a commercial insulin product to treat diabetes, which until then was considered a death sentence. Novo, then a standalone company before its merger with Nordisk, created a longer-lasting version and the first insulin pen.

In 1982, Eli Lilly launched the first synthetic, mass-producible version of human insulin. In 2005, Eli Lilly then created the first GLP-1 drug — a twice-daily injection, but Novo Nordisk would revolutionise the market with the launch of Ozempic in the US in 2017.

Despite Novo Nordisk being first to market, Eli Lilly has benefited from “a second mover advantage” with the launch of its weight-loss medicines, says Rajesh Kumar, head of healthcare equity research at HSBC. “They can see what traps the guy ahead of them is falling into,” he says, allowing them to ramp up manufacturing faster and to invest in next-generation products.

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This year, Mounjaro and Zepbound, which are both based on the active ingredient tirzepatide, are set to generate $18.8bn in sales between them, according to analyst consensus estimates — edging closer to Novo Nordisk’s $27bn in projected revenues from Ozempic and Wegovy, despite being on sale for a shorter period of time. Sales from Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 franchise are projected to surpass Novo Nordisk’s by 2027.

Eli Lilly’s first laboratory building in 1876
Eli Lilly’s first laboratory building in 1876. The drugmaker’s early success included revolutionising diabetes treatment in the 1920s with the first commercial insulin product
The company’s present-day headquarters in Indianapolis
The company’s present-day headquarters in Indianapolis. Eli Lilly has invested billions in manufacturing facilities in recent years © AJ Mast/FT

If orforglipron launches on schedule in 2026, Eli Lilly would enjoy a two-year monopoly of the weight-loss pill market before rivals caught up. At the same time, the company is also developing retatrutide, a treatment that activates three different gut peptides and in mid-stage trials resulted in 24 per cent body mass reduction, far more dramatic than the effects of any existing treatment.

The company is also racing to prove the added benefits of tirzepatide for knock-on effects of obesity, such as sleep apnoea, cardiovascular risk and chronic kidney disease, helping to ease the path to wider insurance coverage. Medicare, the state-backed healthcare programme mostly for over-65s, only covers weight-loss drugs when a patient is suffering from another comorbidity.

“We’re going to eat the elephant one step at a time here . . . by proving the indications not just to lower weight but for the consequences of that,” says Ricks. “I think in five years we’ll look back and say mostly those diseases can be augmented by changing their weight . . . and the payers will look back and say, ‘Yeh, we should cover [tirzepatide] in all these conditions and the precursor condition which is medical obesity.’”

Beyond its longtime rival, Eli Lilly is also facing competition from other quarters. As many as 16 new obesity drugs could launch by the end of the decade, including from drugmakers AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Amgen, according to PitchBook.

But more imminently, Eli Lilly is fighting back against an array of copycat weight-loss drugs. The US Food and Drug Administration permits compounding pharmacies, which typically prepare customised medication, to reproduce trademarked drugs when there is a shortage, and these have flooded the market.

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Ricks argues that there was “no rationality” for tirzepatide to remain on the FDA’s shortage list because of Eli Lilly’s efforts to ramp up supply, adding that compounding presented a risk to patients. “Let’s partner together to solve the production problem, let’s not use this trap door, which exposes Americans to adulterated products with unapproved [active pharmaceutical ingredients].”

With competitors at Eli Lilly’s heels and its key advantage being eroded, investors see warning signs that the company’s valuation may be nearing its peak.

A top-25 shareholder predicts that Eli Lilly will pass the $1tn milestone but says that is “close to the top”. “There’s the inevitable patent cliff, there’s competition and soon there’s going to be a price war to the bottom,” says the investor. “It seems like this is peak enthusiasm for [Eli Lilly].”


If Eli Lilly really wants to escape the pharmaceutical industry’s boom and bust cycle, its research and development team will have to get to work on discovering the next era-defining medicine. The task for Eli Lilly is to determine “what is your next giant pie-in-the-sky thing”, says one investor.

The company is hoping such opportunities may be hidden in the real-world data from the rollout of its anti-obesity medications.

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Early signs suggest that the hundreds of thousands of patients prescribed tirzepatide are starting to see other surprising effects from the treatment: a reduction in anxiety and depression symptoms as well as better control over compulsive behaviours such as smoking and drinking, according to Skovronsky.

Eli Lilly has already put the treatments to work against autoimmune diseases, such as psoriatic arthritis, in combination with other medicines, but Skovronsky says that the effects on mental health and addiction “are intriguing enough that we’re considering . . . how to attack the question of whether these drugs can help those kinds of diseases”.

The drugmaker is also considering including people who are not overweight, but are at risk of weight gain, in future trials of its weight-loss pills and other treatments, suggesting it is already searching for ways to expand the weight-loss drug market.

The biggest question for Eli Lilly, however, is what the company will do with the unprecedented windfall from its weight-loss drugs.

Eli Lilly chief executive David Ricks
Eli Lilly chief executive Ricks says he has favoured early-stage R&D bets over big, set-piece acquisitions © AJ Mast/FT
A lab setup with three transparent vessels containing yellow liquid
Manufacturing equipment at the drugmaker’s new lab in Kinsale, Ireland. Ricks says the company kept going with diabetes and obesity research when other pharma groups gave up © Paulo Nunes dos Santos/Bloomberg

Between now and 2030, analysts expect the business to generate $187bn in free cash flow, with which Eli Lilly can do whatever it wants. As one venture capitalist put it: while industry watchers are obsessing over Eli Lilly’s market value, what will be more defining is what Lilly does “once the money comes in the door”.

“Our capacity to spend is going up so we should look at everything but probably not change our principles,” says Ricks, adding that he favoured early-stage R&D bets over big, set-piece acquisitions that provide a bump in revenues but curtail growth.

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“When this company’s future was in doubt . . . we made a bet on R&D and we survived that by being inventive,” says Ricks, pointing to how the company persisted with diabetes and obesity research when other pharma groups gave up.

“That’s probably the way we maintain momentum by being inventive,” says Ricks. “We deploy dollars by project, not by some top-down math . . . so that requires us to get into the weeds on each project and get excited about it or not.”

When Merck’s blockbuster cancer immunotherapy drug Keytruda launched in 2014, Skovronsky recalls rushing to catch up and launch Eli Lilly’s own version of the class of drugs known as checkpoint inhibitors. He predicts that many rival drugmakers will miss the next wave of innovation as they try to find a route into the obesity market.

Meanwhile, Eli Lilly will have the breathing room to pursue its next big innovation: now that Kisunla, its treatment for people with early-stage Alzheimer’s, has been approved in the US, it is putting the medicine to work as preventive treatment for the incurable brain disorder.

Skovronsky adds that Eli Lilly, whose previous biggest drug was depression treatment Prozac, is likely to push back into psychiatry. Non-opioid painkillers are also an area of potential growth, as the US continues to search for solutions to the opioid crisis.

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Companies “have gotten challenged by investors in the years coming up to the cliff not because the rest of the business isn’t growing through the cliff but because the rest of the business just is uninteresting”, says Jacob Van Naarden, who runs Eli Lilly’s oncology division.

For Eli Lilly, the challenge will be to prove to investors that the rest of its business can be as attractive as its blockbuster GLP-1 drugs. “If you remove the diabetes and obesity businesses, they don’t execute that well,” says one investor. “There’s some risk in just going into new areas, because just like Novo actually they’re really good at this one thing . . . the rest are a mixed bag.”

And the odds are long. Discovering hugely popular medicines like statin Lipitor, autoimmune medicine Humira, Keytruda and now the GLP-1s “happens pretty infrequently and usually not by the same company twice in a row”, says Van Naarden. “Maybe it’s us — that’d be great.”

Data visualisation by Ian Bott, Keith Fray and Patrick Mathurin

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Video: Welcome to Rennie Harris’s Dance Floor

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Video: Welcome to Rennie Harris’s Dance Floor

new video loaded: Welcome to Rennie Harris’s Dance Floor

The acclaimed hip-hop choreographer Rennie Harris’s production “American Street Dancer” brought Detroit Jit, Chicago Footwork and Philly GQ to the stage. We invited cast members to showcase the three street dance styles.

By Chevaz Clarke and Vincent Tullo

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Trial begins for officer accused of failing to protect children during Uvalde shooting

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Trial begins for officer accused of failing to protect children during Uvalde shooting

Flowers and candles are placed around crosses to honor the victims killed in a school shooting, May 28, 2022, outside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.

Jae C. Hong/AP


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CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — One of the first police officers to respond to the 2022 school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, goes on trial Monday on charges that he failed to protect children during the attack, when authorities waited more than an hour to confront the gunman.

Adrian Gonzales, a former Uvalde schools officer, faces 29 counts of child abandonment or endangerment in a rare prosecution of an officer accused of not doing more to stop a crime and protect lives.

The teenage gunman killed 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary in one of deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.

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Nearly 400 officers from state, local and federal law enforcement agencies responded to the school, but 77 minutes passed from the time authorities arrived until a tactical team breached the classroom and killed the shooter, Salvador Ramos. An investigation later showed that Ramos was obsessed with violence and notoriety in the months leading up to the attack.

Gonzales and former Uvalde schools police chief Pete Arredondo were among the first on the scene, and they are the only two officers to face criminal charges over the slow response. Arredondo’s trial has not yet been scheduled.

The charges against Gonzales carry up to two years in prison if he is convicted. The trial, which is expected to last up to three weeks, begins with jury selection.

Gonzales pleaded not guilty. His attorney has said Gonzales tried to save children that day.

Police and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott initially said swift law enforcement action killed Ramos and saved lives. But that version quickly unraveled as families described begging police to go into the building and 911 calls emerged from students pleading for help.

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The indictment alleges Gonzales placed children in “imminent danger” of injury or death by failing to engage, distract or delay the shooter and by not following his active shooter training. The allegations also say he did not advance toward the gunfire despite hearing shots and being told where the shooter was.

State and federal reviews of the shooting cited cascading problems in law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned why officers waited so long.

According to the state review, Gonzales told investigators that once police realized there were students still sitting in other classrooms, he helped evacuate them.

Some family members of the victims have said more officers should be indicted.

“They all waited and allowed children and teachers to die,” said Velma Lisa Duran, whose sister Irma Garcia was one of the two teachers who were killed.

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Prosecutors will likely face a high bar to win a conviction. Juries are often reluctant to convict law enforcement officers for inaction, as seen after the Parkland, Florida, school massacre in 2018.

Sheriff’s deputy Scot Peterson was charged with failing to confront the shooter in that attack. It was the first such prosecution in the U.S. for an on-campus shooting, and Peterson was acquitted by a jury in 2023.

At the request of Gonzales’ attorneys, the trial was moved about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast to Corpus Christi. They argued Gonzales could not receive a fair trial in Uvalde, and prosecutors did not object.

Uvalde, a town of 15,000, still has several prominent reminders of the shooting. Robb Elementary is closed but still stands, and a memorial of 21 crosses and flower sits near the school sign. Another memorial sits at the downtown plaza fountain, and murals depicting several victims can still be seen on the walls of several buildings.

Jesse Rizo, whose 9-year-old niece Jackie was one of the students killed, said even with three-hour drive to Corpus Christi, the family would like to have someone attend the trial every day.

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“It’s important that the jury see that Jackie had a big, strong family,” Rizo said.

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Cuba says 32 Cuban fighters killed in US raids on Venezuela

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Cuba says 32 Cuban fighters killed in US raids on Venezuela

Havana declares two days of mourning for the Cubans killed in US operation to abduct Nicolas Maduro.

Cuba has announced the death of 32 ⁠of its ​citizens during the United States military operation to abduct and detain Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife in Caracas.

Havana said on Sunday that there would be two days of mourning on ‌January 5 and ‌6 in ⁠honour of those killed and that ‌funeral arrangements would be announced.

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The state-run Prensa Latina agency said the Cuban “fighters” were killed while “carrying out missions” on behalf of the country’s military, at the request of the Venezuelan government.

The agency said the slain Cubans “fell in direct combat against the attackers or as a result of the bombing of the facilities” after offering “fierce resistance”.

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Cuba is a close ally of Venezuela’s government, and has sent military and police forces to assist in operations in the Latin American country for years.

Maduro and his wife have been flown to New York following the US operation to face prosecution on drug-related charges. The 63-year-old Venezuelan leader is due to appear in court on Monday.

He has previously denied criminal involvement.

Images of Maduro blindfolded and handcuffed by US forces have stunned Venezuelans.

Venezuelan Minister of Defence General Vladimir Padrino said on state television that the US attack killed soldiers, civilians and a “large part” of Maduro’s security detail “in cold blood”.

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Venezuela’s armed forces have been activated to guarantee sovereignty, he said.

‘A lot of Cubans’ killed

US President Donald Trump, speaking to reporters on board Air Force One on Sunday, said that “there was a lot of death on the other side” during the raids.

He said that “a lot of Cubans” were killed and that there was “no death on our side”.

Trump went on to threaten Colombian President Gustavo Petro, saying that a US military operation in the country sounded “good” to him.

But he suggested that a US military intervention in Cuba is unlikely, because the island appears to be ready to fall on its own.

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“Cuba is ready to fall. Cuba looks like it’s ready to fall. I don’t know how they, if they can, hold that, but Cuba now has no income. They got all of their income from Venezuela, from the Venezuelan oil,” Trump said.

“They’re not getting any of it. Cuba literally is ready to fall. And you have a lot of great Cuban Americans that are going to be very happy about this.”

The US attack on Venezuela marked the most controversial intervention in Latin America since the invasion of Panama 37 years ago.

The Trump administration has described Maduro’s abduction as a law-enforcement mission to force him to face US criminal charges filed in 2020, including “narco-terrorism” conspiracy.

But Trump also said that US oil companies needed “total access” to the country’s vast reserves and suggested that an influx of Venezuelan immigrants to the US also factored into the decision to abduct Maduro.

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While many Western nations oppose Maduro, there were many calls for the US to respect international law, and questions arose over the legality of abducting a foreign head of state.

Left-leaning regional leaders, including those of Brazil, Colombia, Chile and Mexico, have largely denounced Maduro’s removal, while countries with right-wing governments, from Argentina to Ecuador, have largely welcomed it.

The United Nations Security Council plans to meet on Monday to discuss the attack. Russia and China, both major backers of Venezuela, have criticised the US.

Beijing on Sunday insisted that the safety of Maduro and his wife be a priority, and called on the US to “stop toppling the government of Venezuela”, calling the attack a “clear violation of international law“.

Moscow also said it was “extremely concerned” about the abduction of Maduro and his wife, and condemned what it called an “act of armed aggression” against Venezuela by the US.

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