What is EL’s endgame here?

It'll go like this...

They will introduce reta as their premium offering. And then keep lowering the price of tirz when you use the coupon/lilly direct if your insurance denies it. Rinse and repeat. They'll go after anyone and everyone until their patent expires.
 
It'll go like this...

They will introduce reta as their premium offering. And then keep lowering the price of tirz when you use the coupon/lilly direct if your insurance denies it. Rinse and repeat. They'll go after anyone and everyone until their patent expires.
I disagree. Unless cagrisema or something else challenges them, they have both of the superior drugs (a pseudomonopoly). Their greedy interest is to have BOTH tirz and Reta be very very expensive.
 
I disagree. Unless cagrisema or something else challenges them, they have both of the superior drugs (a pseudomonopoly). Their greedy interest is to have BOTH tirz and Reta be very very expensive.
I didnt say it would be cheap. Just that the price would lower. They can be at compound prices and people would buy the shit out of it. They've already lowered their voucher price before. There's so many glps that will flood the industry in 26/27
 
I disagree. Unless cagrisema or something else challenges them, they have both of the superior drugs (a pseudomonopoly). Their greedy interest is to have BOTH tirz and Reta be very very expensive.
These branded weight loss drugs will only get significantly cheaper when there are at least 4 or 5 different options which are produced by 4 or 5 different pharmacy companies and all work about equally well for most people.
 
These branded weight loss drugs will only get significantly cheaper when there are at least 4 or 5 different options which are produced by 4 or 5 different pharmacy companies and all work about equally well for most people.
Bingo. And the insurance companies will continue to tighten their guidelines on what they will cover. These pharma companies know their money is coming mostly from people who want to lose weight, not those with medical conditions. They lower the cost to get vials in hands and compete. Think there's 8 glp 1s that should arrive in 26/27.
 
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ELI can't keep up with demand with the product priced $600-$1400/mo.

If you were running a business and could not keep up with demand would you lower your price or raise it to moderate the demand until you are able to add production capacity? ELI is a public company that answers to shareholders and their goal will always be to maximize the return for shareholders. What I don't understand is why they have it priced so low outside of the US. Someone posted on reddit a few weeks ago that they are in Poland and the cost was like $150 and no prescription needed??
 
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These branded weight loss drugs will only get significantly cheaper when there are at least 4 or 5 different options which are produced by 4 or 5 different pharmacy companies and all work about equally well for most people.
The crucial question is which if any are actually good enough to challenge tirz or Reta. More sema tier drugs means EL keeps pseudo monopoly status.
 
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The crucial question is which if any are actually good enough to challenge tirz or Reta. More sema tier drugs means EL keeps pseudo monopoly status.

People are overlooking Mazdutide but that another Lilly controlled drug that won't change this dynamic at all and it won't be approved in the US for a while.

Pemvidutide and MariTide are the real outside challengers. I've already expressed my concerns about the fact that MariTide is long acting, but Pemvidutide appears to be better than Reta.
 
They want 1k per month whether you’re on tirz or Reta or any other drug really. Their end game is they make the drug as inaccessible as possible via alternative means. They’re banking on enough insurances coming on board that 1k a month (or some other negotiated value) would still net way more than Japan’s price
This here.
 
People are overlooking Mazdutide but that another Lilly controlled drug that won't change this dynamic at all and it won't be approved in the US for a while.

Pemvidutide and MariTide are the real outside challengers. I've already expressed my concerns about the fact that MariTide is long acting, but Pemvidutide appears to be better than Reta.
There’s also that Oljdifjdnejd one. It has a section on this forum. Further, Viking Pharmaceuticals V83738283 is getting through.
Lilly is def trying to bank what they can for now
 

They’ve been trying to say it’s a demonstrably difficult compound since August. But it’s obvious no one can afford it and by next year better drugs will be available so it’s almost like they don’t want people on it? What a truly weird way to drive people away. They could make it affordable and make so much more money. This drug costs $84 in Japan so it’s not like it’s costly to manufacture. Am I missing something here? Do they really think people will pay $1000 a month for it?
My health insurance pays a large of money for me to take Zepbound. Supposedly they pay about $650 every four weeks for it, although with pharmacy benefit managers and the weird way they do things, I know that it pays less for it. However, while you say that no one will pay for Zepbound, many individuals and insurance companies already are.

My lay opinion is that the FDA won't go along with semaglutide and tirzepatide being difficult to compound. They're actually quite easy to compound. Both Novo and Lilly submissions includes deaths reported to the FDA Federal Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), a system includes any reports of deaths made by anyone. No confirmation is required before being inputted into the data pool. Thus, to accept that compounded semaglutide caused many deaths, you'd also need to accept that Wegovy caused a larger number of deaths. (I haven't actually looked up the data on Zepbound, but I expect it to be similar.)
 
People big enough to qualify for a prescription for a weight loss drug. Unless they want to focus on people who are already at or near a healthy weight and want to be thinner.
They want to focus on whoever is willing to pay exorbitant prices. And that is a HUGE market, I would casually say that's nearly everybody, from the over 40 BMI "whales" to people who just want to lose 15-20 lbs and have the $$ to spend. There is no shortage of people willing to pay anything for a weight loss drug that works.
It's price-gouging, plain and simple, and this country's "healthcare" system is so corrupt that they refuse to make laws limiting this abuse against public health.
 
Amusingly enough I had never even heard of compounding pharmacies before the Eli Lily lawsuit. Once I learned about them and found one I trusted and started doing more research I discovered all of this. I feel like the publicity they're giving the grey market is just going to raise more awareness and more people are going to dive in.
 
It'll go like this...

They will introduce reta as their premium offering. And then keep lowering the price of tirz when you use the coupon/lilly direct if your insurance denies it. Rinse and repeat. They'll go after anyone and everyone until their patent expires.
Based upon what I've observed with other drugs, Lilly won't lower their price for Zepbound when retatrutide comes out.
 
More competition is coming in the next 2-3 years. They will be forced to lower prices to compete for market share. I expect Tirz to be their "low cost" medication, while Reta is the "premium" product for those who can afford it.
 
More competition is coming in the next 2-3 years. They will be forced to lower prices to compete for market share. I expect Tirz to be their "low cost" medication, while Reta is the "premium" product for those who can afford it.

Based upon what I've observed with other drugs, Lilly won't lower their price for Mounjaro/Zepbound when retatrutide comes out. Novo won't lower its price for Ozempic/Wegovy when cagrilintide/semaglutide comes out.
 
Viking and Amgen are both in Phase III. Worldwide there are over 100 peptides being explored. It is a gold rush. It may take longer than 2-3 years, but competition is coming. It won't just be 2 players seeing how high they can keep the prices. So, according to Lilly, in the meantime you need to either pay up or stay fat and sick. I don't think that they realize how much hatred for them they are creating. Some day, when people have a choice, they will remember what Lilly did.
 
Based upon what I've observed with other drugs, Lilly won't lower their price for Mounjaro/Zepbound when retatrutide comes out. Novo won't lower its price for Ozempic/Wegovy when cagrilintide/semaglutide comes out.
Exactly. The price for Ozempic actually went up in Jan 2024, right after Zepbound was approved. They won't compete against themselves or each other. Plus PBMs have been known to drop lower price options because it means they get less in fees. There's not the market pressure here that could otherwise work.
 
Anyone who has ever paid an iota of attention to "Big Pharma" should already hate all the U.S. pharmaceutical industry--there's a reason they got that notorious name.
 
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