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LONDON — U.S. pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly is exploring whether obesity drugs could be used to curb joblessness after signing a major investment deal with the U.K. The weight-loss treatment firm and creator of Zepbound announced Monday that it would commit £279 million ($364 million) to help tackle Britain’s significant health challenges — including obesity. Within that, the five-year trial, conducted in collaboration with Health Innovation Manchester, will also explore how weight-loss drugs impact “participants’ employment status and sick days from work,” the company said in a news release. The use cases for obesity drugs have been growing over recent months, with several drug regulators expanding GLP-1 drug labels for use in treating obesity-related comorbidities and other illnesses. The company said it anticipates making an additional £279 million of new investment into the U.K. over the coming years.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Zepbound, , Rachel Batterham, Wes Streeting, Streeting, “ It’s, ” Streeting, Peter Verdault, , Dr, Dolly van Tulleken, Eli Lilly’s Organizations: LONDON, U.K, of Health, Social, Department for Science, Innovation, Technology, Labour government’s, Investment, National Health Services, Health Innovation, International Medical, British Health, Social Care, Covid, NHS can’t, CNBC, Citi, MRC, University of Cambridge, BBC Radio, Lilly, Labs Locations: Lilly, British, Europe
An Eli Lilly & Co. Zepbound injection pen arranged in the Brooklyn borough of New York on March 28, 2024. LONDON — U.S. pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly is exploring whether obesity drugs could be used to curb joblessness after signing a major investment deal with the U.K. The use cases for obesity drugs have been growing over recent months, with several drug regulators expanding GLP-1 drug labels for use in treating obesity-related comorbidities and other illnesses. Speaking to CNBC last week, Citi pharmaceuticals analyst Peter Verdault said the body of evidence to support increased use of weight-loss drugs "keeps coming." The company said it anticipates making an additional £279 million of new investment into the U.K. over the coming years.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Zepbound, Rachel Batterham, Lilly, Wes Streeting, Covid, Streeting, Peter Verdault, Dolly van Tulleken, Eli Lilly's Organizations: LONDON, U.K, Department of Health, Social, Department for Science, Innovation, Technology, Labour government's, Investment, National Health Services, Health Innovation, International Medical, Social Care, CNBC, Citi, MRC, University of Cambridge, BBC Radio, Lilly Locations: Brooklyn, New York, Europe
It's not unusual for a company's stock price to soar — or sink — on news of a CEO shakeup. So, CEOs matter when picking stocks — and at the Club, these are the five things we look for when evaluating the leaders of our holdings. A stock's day-to-day and even month-to-month performance may not truly reflect how well a CEO is leading a company. Trust has value, and the stocks of companies led by reputable CEOs with competent management teams can trade at premium valuations. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: Mary Dillon, Locker, J im Cramer, buybacks, Rainer Blair, , Kevin Johnson, Marc Benioff, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, we've, Bruce Broussard, Humana, Jeff Smith's, Craig Jelinek, who's, that's, Jelinek, it'd, Andy Jassy, Tim Cook, he's, Cook, Jim Cramer's, Dan Schulman, Sanjiv Lamba, Linde, Lamba, Eli Lilly, Dave Ricks, Eli Lilly's, Jim, Lilly, Jim Farley, Farley, Elon Musk's Tesla, Ford, LLY, Jim Cramer, Spencer Platt Organizations: Club, McKinsey & Co, Natural Resources, GE Life Sciences, SVB Securities, Starbucks, Humana, Bain & Co, Costco, CNBC, Apple, Amazon's, Football, MGM, Management, PayPal, Linde, LIN, Ford Motor, Wall, EV, Ford, The New York Stock Exchange, Financial, Getty Locations: U.S, Manhattan, New York City
Investors may get one share in the spun-out entity for every share of the parent company they owned. What's left of J & J will be focused on pharmaceuticals and medical technologies, which were responsible for over 84% of the company's total 2022 revenue of $94.94 billion. It underscores that once free of the parent company tethers a divested company can chart its own destiny. Those priorities may not have necessarily been wrong when considering J & J as the overall enterprise. We believe J & J and Danaher are poised to deliver two more examples.
We are buying 15 shares of Danaher (DHR) at roughly $248.34 apiece. Following Tuesday's trade, Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust will own 495 shares of DHR, increasing its weighting in the portfolio to about 4.76% from 4.62%. Despite the company's strong fourth-quarter earnings beat in January, shares of Danaher are down about 11% since late January. DHR 1Y mountain Danaher (DHR) one-year performance. (Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust is long DHR.
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