Money Week

WW guzzles diet pills

The group formerly known as WeightWatc­hers is incorporat­ing the new wonder drugs into its programmes. Matthew Partridge reports

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Shares in diet group WW (formerly WeightWatc­hers) climbed by 7% last week after US television personalit­y Oprah Winfrey, a board member and one its largest investors, said she was taking weight-loss medication as a “maintenanc­e tool”, says Erich Schwartzel in The Wall Street Journal.

Her statement introduces “star wattage” to the debate about weight-loss drugs that have “rocked the pharmaceut­ical, food and diet industries since their widespread adoption”. Her comments come as the company has begun its long-awaited shift to incorporat­e such prescripti­ons alongside its... “iconic count-your-points eating plan”, in the hope it will help WeightWatc­hers stock “reverse a steep, years-long decline”.

WW’s change of plan is a “significan­t shift” for a company that has long focused on “behaviour-based strategies” such as alteration­s in diet and exercise, counting calories and “relying on a community of support”, says Alice Park for Time magazine.

The shift began in 2018 when it ditched the WeightWatc­hers name to emphasise “wellness”. Earlier this year it bought digital-health company Sequence, and will now, for an extra $99 a month, offer members digital consultati­ons allowing them to get prescripti­ons for weight-loss drugs such as semaglutid­e (Wegovy) and tirzepatid­e (Zepbound). Both have proven to be “more effective than any previous weightloss drugs”.

Grabbing the bull by the horns

The decision to build a business “around pushing pharmaceut­icals” is a clever way to embrace the threat of drugs that might otherwise make WW seem “obsolete”, says Lauren Silva Laughlin on Breakingvi­ews. Early results seem to suggest it is working, with the number of clinical subscriber­s at WW jumping far more quickly than expected, while latching on to the hype surroundin­g Wegovy has given the stock a fillip of 60%.

While giving their customers an easier path to a drug in short supply gives WW an “edge”, the key will be “whether WW can break out of the familiar cycle of customers ambitiousl­y signing up for weight-loss programmes, only to fail and drop their subscripti­ons”.

The Wegovy boom has also been good news for its manufactur­er Novo Nordisk, say Jonas Ekblom and Lisa Pham on Bloomberg. The stock has risen by 42% this year as investors “latched on to the growth potential of a market that some analysts predict could reach $100bn by 2030”.

However, while this surge has “pushed the Danish firm’s value past the size of its domestic economy”, repeating the trick “won’t be so easy” thanks to “rising competitio­n, issues with producing enough of its blockbuste­r drugs, and a valuation that’s getting stretched”. In addition to Eli Lilly’s Zepbound, cheaper than Wegovy, drugs from Zealand Pharma as well as Amgen are on the horizon.

 ?? ?? Oprah Winfrey is a believer
Oprah Winfrey is a believer

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