Lilly shares rise on hopes that next-gen drug will extend lead in weight-loss market

Lilly shares rise on hopes that next-gen drug will extend lead in weight-loss market

Eli Lilly (LLY.N), opens new tab shares rose 4% on Monday, driven by compelling new data for its next-generation obesity drug, retatrutide, with analysts and investors expecting it ​to extend the drugmaker’s lead in the booming weight-loss market.

Lilly ‌presented full data from two retatrutide trials, one in treatment naive type 2 diabetes patients and another in patients with obesity, at the American Diabetes Association meeting in New Orleans.

Investors ​were most encouraged by the performance of the lower 4 mg ​dose of retatrutide, which produced roughly 19% weight loss, comparable ⁠to the highest dose of current blockbuster therapy Zepbound.

Tolerability was broadly in line, ​including similar rates of treatment discontinuation and relatively low levels of vomiting.
However, side ​effects increased at higher doses.

“The 4mg dose efficacy data for retatrutide are compelling enough that first-line positioning cannot be dismissed,” Citi analysts said in a note, adding that this ​positions the drug as “the next step for patients who have exhausted Lilly’s tirzepatide ​efficacy.”

Drugmakers in the obesity market are increasingly competing on tolerability, aiming to balance strong results ‌with ⁠fewer side effects and simpler dosing to push wider adoption.

Lilly shares have gained 9% so far this year, following a huge rally in 2025. In contrast, its closest rival Novo Nordisk (NOVOb.CO), opens new tab has seen a roughly 17% year-to-date decline.

Some ​analysts flagged that retatrutide ​could be a ⁠strong new competitor for Novo, starting next year.

“LLY has the pieces in place to further raise the standard of ​care in the obesity space, and we see the company ​if anything ⁠further extending its leadership position in the $200bn+ incretin/obesity market longer term,” J.P. Morgan analyst Chris Schott said.

Lilly also presented additional data on other candidates, including its ⁠approved weight-loss ​pill and another experimental injectable, eloralintide.

RBC Capital ​Markets analyst Trung Huynh said the depth of Lilly’s obesity portfolio “highlighted its leadership growing rather than a ​narrowing gap with competitors”.

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