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Wegovy, Ozempic maker Novo Nordisk Q3 earnings

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A box of Ozempic sits on a table in North Tyneside, Britain, Oct. 31, 2023.

Lee Smith | Reuters

Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk said Wednesday it is trimming its growth expectations for its leading obesity and diabetes treatments as competition intensifies and pricing pressures mount in the weight loss market.

Net profit for the quarter came in at 20 billion Danish kroner ($3.1 billion) in line with the 20.12 billion Danish kroner anticipated by analysts in a FactSet poll.

Diabetes and obesity care were a key growth driver following the uptake of Wegovy and Ozempic, however the company lowered its expectations for growth, citing prescription trends, competition and pricing pressure.

Novo narrowed its full-year guidance for the fourth time this year, saying it now expects sales growth within the range of 8% to 11% at constant exchange rates, compared to a previous forecast of 8% to 14%. It also lowered its expectations for operating profit growth of 4% to 10% to a new forecast of 4% to 7%.

Sales of its blockbuster weight loss drug Wegovy rose 18% year-on-year to hit 20.35 billion Danish kroner in the three months to September, slightly below the 21.35 billion kroner expected by analysts.

Operating profit for the first nine months of 2025 came in 10% higher compared to the same period the year prior, at 95.9 billion kroner, though the company noted that this would have increased by 21% if it wasn’t for restructuring costs of around 9 billion kroner.

CNBC's Charlotte Reed breaks down Q3 results for Novo Nordisk

“While we delivered robust sales growth in the first nine months of 2025, the lower growth expectations for our GLP-1 treatments have led to a narrowing of our guidance,” Mike Doustdar, president and CEO said in a statement.

“We aim to accelerate on all fronts to be able to compete better in dynamic and increasingly competitive markets,” he added, noting the acquisition of Akero Therapeutics Inc. and progress testing another weight management drug.

Novo’s Copenhagen-listed shares have tumbled more than 50% over the course of this year, as a slew of headwinds has shaken investor confidence in what was once Europe’s most valuable firm.

Alongside a series of disappointing trial results, increasing competition in the obesity drug space and challenges arising from U.S. policies on drug pricing and tariffs, Novo has been contending with leadership shakeups and pushback against a key acquisition.

Analysts, as a result, have been mixed on the stock. Jefferies recently cut its rating to underperform while Berenberg is positive on the stock, saying Novo has hit “peak uncertainty.”

“Novo’s superior growth profile and best-in-class R&D returns warrants a higher valuation premium to its peers,” the bank said.

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