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Why Eli Lilly Stock Is Soaring Today, While Novo Nordisk and Viking Therapeutics Slide

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It's Thursday morning, 11:50 a.m. ET -- and Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY) stock is off to the races!

This morning, the Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical giant announced that its new GLP-1 weight loss pill, orforglipron, has "demonstrated statistically significant efficacy results and a safety profile consistent with injectable GLP-1 medicines in successful [ACHIEVE-1] Phase 3 trial."

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Lilly shares are up 14.2% in response to the news, while shares of its rivals in the GLP-1 weight loss market, Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO) and Viking Therapeutics (NASDAQ: VKTX), are falling 7.1% and 1.7%, respectively.

Eli Lilly's new GLP-1 wonder drug

Earlier this week, as you may recall, Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) admitted defeat in its own effort to develop a GLP-1 weight loss pill, halting research on its danuglipron once-a-day oral drug after a patient in its study experienced a "potential drug-induced liver injury." Lilly's new drug, on the other hand, seems to have no such side effects and plenty of good effects.

As Lilly described in its press release, orforglipron is "the first oral small molecule glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist, taken without food and water restrictions, to successfully complete a Phase 3 trial." Clinical data from this 40-week trial show that orforglipron helped reduce A1C blood sugar levels in patients "by an average of 1.3% to 1.6%." At the same time, the once-daily oral pill helped reduce patients' weights by an average of 7.9% over the course of the trial.

What's more, Lilly points out: "Given that participants had not yet reached a weight plateau at the time the study ended, it appears that full weight reduction was not yet attained." So, orforglipron has the potential to deliver even greater weight loss when given more time to work.

This all suggests that orforglipron is useful for both treating diabetes and weight loss -- and with no needles required.

GLP-1 drug in a syringe.
Image source: Getty Images.

What this means for Lilly

Lilly notes that the ACHIEVE-1 study was only the first of seven planned Phase 3 clinical studies it will conduct to prove the GLP-1 drug's safety and effectiveness for treating both diabetes and obesity, with no need for injections. The company is therefore still a ways away from commercializing the drug.

That said, completing the six remaining trials should give Lilly plenty of time to ramp up production capacity, such that it will be able "to launch orforglipron worldwide without supply constraints" -- and be first in line to do so with an oral, once-a-day GLP-1 pill.