
Novo Nordisk shares fall further as new CEO faces US challenges
Novo Nordisk on Tuesday slashed its outlook for 2025 sales growth and said it had appointed veteran insider Maziar Mike Doustdar as its new CEO.
Novo, which became Europe's most valuable listed company following the launch of Wegovy in 2021, was worth as much as $615 billion at its peak in June last year. But its shares have fallen by two-thirds on concerns the drugmaker is losing ground in the obesity drug race.
Shares closed down 23% on Tuesday after trading as much as 30% lower. On Wednesday, they had fallen a further 3.1% by 0846 GMT.
Novo said the lower sales outlook reflected competition from "compounded" copycats to Wegovy - custom-made medicines that are based on the same ingredients as branded drugs - which took investors by surprise.
The company's management failed to reassure investors on a call with investors and analysts on Tuesday, when incoming CEO Doustdar stated that "we are having a fantastic growth right now with Wegovy".
"This has really become a severe credibility issue," said Barclays analyst Emily Field. "They don't view the issues that they have as severely as the market does, and that's creating a big problem."
Barclays downgraded the stock to "equal-weight" from "overweight".
Novo on Tuesday said it was intensifying its efforts to regain patients taking compounded versions, and had stepped up dialogue with the U.S. FDA to limit unlawful compounding.
JPMorgan kept its "overweight" recommendation on the stock but cut its target price to 500 crowns from 650 crowns.
Its analysts said in a research note that they expect the company to return to growth in U.S. scripts in the near term, but "would not be surprised to see investors remaining cautious pending evidence of execution against the new targets".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Spectris agrees £4.8bn takeover offer as KKR outbids private equity rival
Private equity giant KKR has trumped rival Advent's takeover bid for British scientific instruments maker Spectris with an improved offer. The two US firms have been battling for control of the FTSE 250 firm since it agreed to an initial £37.63 per Spectris share bid from Advent in June. Spectris withdrew its support for an Advent bid valuing its shares at £41 each on Tuesday, and backed a sweetened KKR offer of £41.75 per share instead. The offer values Spectris' equity at £4.2billion, with an enterprise value of £4.8billion. New York buyout group KKR was dubbed the 'barbarians at the gate' for its fearsome reputation following a 1989 takeover of RJR Nabisco, which was turned into a book and film. It marks another major blow to Britain's public markets, which are on course for the biggest year of takeovers since 2021 after £74billion of offers in the first half, according to Peel Hunt. Spectris directors unanimously recommended KKR's latest offer, which they said was 'fair and reasonable' and 'in the best interests' of shareholders. Spectris shares have more than doubled since Advent's initial bid in June, propelled by the bidding war, and closed at 4,140p on Monday evening. KKR's latest bid values the firm at a 104.9 per cent premium to Spectris' closing share price of £20.38 on 6 June 2025 when Advent's initial bid was made. The firm's latest offer comprises £40.72 in cash and an interim dividend of 28p per Spectris Share. Investors will have to approve the deal at an upcoming meeting before it can go ahead.


Reuters
13 minutes ago
- Reuters
French services sector contracts in July as political uncertainty weighs
PARIS, Aug 5 (Reuters) - France's services sector contracted at a faster pace in July, with political uncertainty and weak demand weighing heavily on business sentiment, an S&P Global survey showed on Tuesday. The HCOB France Services PMI, which measures changes in business activity compared to the previous month, fell to 48.5 in July from 49.6 in June, marking the quickest rate of decline since April. A reading below 50 indicates contraction. The survey highlighted a notable reduction in new work intakes, driven largely by domestic market weakness. Year-ahead expectations deteriorated sharply, with business confidence sliding to a six-month low. Employment levels continued to decline, extending the trend into the third quarter, with temporary contracts less frequently renewed and voluntary departures often not replaced. "The slowdown in business activity is increasingly reflected in capacity utilization," said Hamburg Commercial Bank economist Jonas Feldhusen. "Backlogs of work declined, and forward-looking expectations worsened significantly." Despite the contraction, input cost inflation remained contained, although services firms raised their own prices marginally due to competitive pressures. The composite PMI, which combines both manufacturing and services sectors, also showed a decline, falling to 48.6 from 49.2 in June. This signals a moderate but accelerated contraction in private sector business activity across France. Overall, the data suggests limited economic momentum in the near term, raising concerns about the sustainability of the current growth path.


Reuters
13 minutes ago
- Reuters
Italy's service sector sees stronger growth in July, PMI shows
ROME, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Italy's service sector expanded for an eighth month running in July and at a slightly faster pace than the month before, a survey showed on Tuesday, offering hope for firmer growth in the euro zone's third-largest economy. The HCOB Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for services rose to 52.3 in July from 52.1 in June, comfortably above the 50.0 threshold that separates growth from contraction. A Reuters survey of eight analysts had pointed to a reading of 52.6. "This modest acceleration reflects a sector that remains resilient, underpinned by steady domestic demand and a cautiously improving outlook," said Nils Müller, an economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank AG. Nonetheless, new export business declined for the 12th straight month, reflecting ongoing fragility in global demand, he added. Growth in new business eased for a third month running, with the related subindex slipping to 51.4 from 52.0, the weakest reading in six months, while the services employment subindex fell to 52.3 from 52.8. HCOB's sister survey for the manufacturing sector, published last week, showed contraction for a 16th straight month in July but at a considerably slower rate than the month before. The composite PMI, combining manufacturing and services, rose to 51.5 in July from 51.1 in June, the highest reading since May. The Italian economy unexpectedly shrank 0.1% in the second quarter from the previous three months, after the government in April halved its 2025 growth estimate to 0.6% amid mounting uncertainty due to U.S. tariffs.