Shares of weight-loss drug makers Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly fell on Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump said that the price of Novo’s popular Ozempic treatment would be lowered.
Although Ozempic is approved to treat diabetes, it shares the same active ingredient – semaglutide – as the Danish drugmaker’s blockbuster obesity treatment Wegovy. In the United States, Ozempic has been frequently used as a so-called off-label treatment for obesity and often served as a generic reference to weight-loss drugs.
Since taking office in January, Trump has been striving to narrow the gap between U.S. and foreign drug prices. Under its “most favored nation” policy, the U.S. government will require drugmakers to charge patients in the U.S. no more than in other wealthy nations.
INVESTORS BRACED FOR PRICE CUTS
Novo’s shares fell to a near three-week low of 342.3 crowns and were last down 6% at 344.7 crowns. Shares in rivals dropped as well, with Eli Lilly down 4% and Zealand Pharma down 5%. In U.S. pre-market trading, Viking Therapeutics was down nearly 6%, and Altimmune down 1%.
BMO Capital markets analyst Evan Seigerman said that the market reaction to Trump’s comments seemed exaggerated.
Trump’s made the comments during a White House event on Thursday, where he announced a deal with Germany’s Merck to cut the cost of some drugs needed for in-vitro fertilisation in exchange for protection from future tariffs.
Trump was asked by reporters to identify the drug that he said earlier at the event would be made less expensive.





