Top Posts
Wall Street’s new darling: Eli Lilly becomes healthcare’s...
Tesla stock down 2% on Friday: should you...
Nvidia stock extends decline today: should you ‘buy...
How to play Eli Lilly stock as it...
Europe bulletin: UK growth stalls, Nokia bets big...
Ocado share price forms risky pattern as Kroger...
Stock market crash: here’s why global equities are...
PayPoint share price pattern points to a steeper...
Walmart stock price analysis after its earnings report:...
Top news to drive the US stock market...
Major Gross Profit – Investing and Stock News
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Stock

Wall Street’s new darling: Eli Lilly becomes healthcare’s first $1 trillion powerhouse

by admin November 21, 2025
November 21, 2025

Eli Lilly crossed into historic territory on Friday, becoming the first healthcare company ever to hit a $1 trillion market valuation.

Shares rose 1.7% to mark the milestone, cementing the Indianapolis pharmaceutical giant as Wall Street’s newest mega-cap champion.

With stock gains exceeding 36% year-to-date, Lilly has dramatically outpaced tech volatility and signaled a major investor rotation toward defensive, high-growth healthcare plays, especially as mega-cap tech faces mounting questions about valuations and returns.

The GLP-1 goldmine: How obesity drugs minted a trillion-dollar giant

Lilly’s ascent rests almost entirely on two blockbuster drugs: Mounjaro, which treats type 2 diabetes, and Zepbound, the weight-loss injection.

Together, they’re rewriting pharmaceutical economics. In Q3 2025, the duo generated $10.1 billion in combined revenue, more than 57% of Lilly’s total $17.6 billion quarterly sales.

Mounjaro nearly doubled to $6.52 billion, crushing analyst expectations of $5.51 billion, while Zepbound nearly tripled to $3.57 billion, topping estimates of $3.5 billion.​

The commanding market share tells the real story. Lilly now captures nearly 60% of all US GLP-1 prescriptions, compared to competitor Novo Nordisk, which commands just 42%.

This dominance reflects both superior drug efficacy; Mounjaro’s dual-action mechanism outperforms Novo’s single-target semaglutide and Lilly’s aggressive direct-to-consumer strategy.

The Walmart partnership to sell Zepbound vials at lower cash prices has particularly resonated with price-sensitive patients.​

Wall Street projects breathtaking growth ahead.

Analysts estimate the weight-loss drug market could reach $150 billion by the early 2030s, with Truist Securities predicting Lilly’s obesity portfolio, including the upcoming oral drug orforglipron, due early 2026, could hit $101 billion in peak worldwide revenue.

A White House pricing deal on GLP-1s could unlock another 40 million Medicare patients, dramatically expanding the addressable market size.

Once considered niche, obesity treatment has become the most profitable healthcare category.​

Beyond obesity: Why Lilly is the ‘new magnificent seven’ for risk-averse investors

Lilly’s trillion-dollar valuation signals a fundamental shift in investor sentiment.

With mega-cap technology stocks under pressure over AI capex returns, Lilly offers what tech cannot: predictable, near-term revenue growth tied to an expanding addressable market.

The company trades at roughly 51x forward earnings, a premium, yes, but justified by recurring growth less vulnerable to semiconductor cycles or geopolitical whipsaw.​

CEO Dave Ricks is deliberately positioning Lilly as a long-term compounder.

His strategy includes an R&D partnership with Nvidia, launching a drug-discovery supercomputer in January 2026, signaling intent to extend innovation pipelines beyond the patent cliff.

The risks remain real: pricing pressures on Mounjaro and execution risks on orforglipron could test momentum.

But for now, Lilly has captured the market imagination as the anti-tech mega-cap story, rare validation for healthcare in a tech-dominated era.

The post Wall Street’s new darling: Eli Lilly becomes healthcare’s first $1 trillion powerhouse appeared first on Invezz

previous post
Tesla stock down 2% on Friday: should you sell TSLA or buy the dip?

related articles

Tesla stock down 2% on Friday: should you...

November 21, 2025

Nvidia stock extends decline today: should you ‘buy...

November 21, 2025

How to play Eli Lilly stock as it...

November 21, 2025

Europe bulletin: UK growth stalls, Nokia bets big...

November 21, 2025

Iran warns of consequences after UN watchdog demands...

November 20, 2025

Explained: UK’s accelerated settlement route

November 20, 2025

Why Tesla stock is soaring 6% after Nvidia’s...

November 20, 2025

Bath & Body Works stock: it’s not the...

November 20, 2025

Europe bulletin: US pushes Kyiv talks, EU hardens...

November 20, 2025

Brazil’s Ibovespa slips as oil drop and Banco...

November 19, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free

Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Wall Street’s new darling: Eli Lilly becomes healthcare’s first $1 trillion powerhouse
  • Tesla stock down 2% on Friday: should you sell TSLA or buy the dip?
  • Nvidia stock extends decline today: should you ‘buy the dip’ in the AI darling?
  • How to play Eli Lilly stock as it hits a much-anticipated milestone?
  • Europe bulletin: UK growth stalls, Nokia bets big on AI, Ukraine peace talks shift sentiment

Editor’s Pick

Ocado share price forms risky pattern as Kroger...

November 21, 2025

Stock market crash: here’s why global equities are...

November 21, 2025

PayPoint share price pattern points to a steeper...

November 21, 2025

Walmart stock price analysis after its earnings report:...

November 21, 2025

Top news to drive the US stock market...

November 21, 2025
Footer Logo
  • Email Whitelisting
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contacts
  • About us

Copyright © 2025 MajorGrossProfit.com All Rights Reserved.

Major Gross Profit – Investing and Stock News
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick