Novo-NordiskNVOCOMMENTNov 14, 2016Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 24, 2026. Market Open.
Weight-loss drug was a huge launch for it, yet LLY has been surpassing them on clinical trials and pipeline in the therapeutic area. Drug launch does not equal pipeline. NVO is behind, hence the 10x PE. If you buy, you're signing up for the dividend yield and the hope that it doesn't lose too much market share along the way.
Screaming buy? No. Touchstone, cornerstone, foundation? Absolutely not. Makes sense as a very small part of a broad, diversified portfolio? OK.
Used to own. Sold in 2024 when it broke the uptrend. Trended downward until the fall, then has had 6 months to establish a decent base. Broke the downtrend, went above $50, acting as though it's under renewed accumulation. May not go screaming back up the way it did in 2023-24, but looking pretty good technically.
LLY is breaking out to new highs. Bit more diversified than NVO, and a bit more stable. LLY is supposed to come out with pill form for weight loss sometime this year. Well above 200-day MA, which is starting to push higher. Prefers LLY.
NVO is more focused on 2 areas: diabetes and weight loss. Recently announced pill version for weight loss, and that's very positive. Valuation's quite cheap. Competitive pricing, regulatory scrutiny. Trades at 17x PE, but earnings growth forecast looks cloudy for next couple of years. Might be building a base, but still a tad below 200-day MA.
Both have signed agreement with US government for expansion in Medicare, albeit with lower pricing.
Weight-loss space is currently a battle between NVO and LLY, though other competitors will arrive on the scene in the next 5-10 years. LLY secured way more capacity than NVO did. LLY executed better, and revenue and sales should grow much faster. He owns LLY.
Huge drop makes it more interesting, but LLY still has the better growth outlook (including the pill version when it hits the market later this year).
The share price has come down roughly 45% in the last year, mostly on lack of pricing power in the US. Now that Trump is in power, healthcare stocks have started to turn back to some degree. This company has seen a decline in sales in the US, but they are primarily insulin makers, and have got 51% market share. Where they fall in price, they are going to pick up on volume, because there is still expected to be another 50% increase in type I and type II diabetes over the next 25 years. Because they are no longer the high growth story, the stock has come down and is now trading at a value that is based on 6%-7% revenue growth, which he thinks is fairly valued right now. They have no debt and are going to start to diversify away from the step-by-step insulin, into kidney and liver disease. The dividend has plenty of room to grow.