Could Viking Therapeutics Become the Next Eli Lilly?

Could Viking Therapeutics Become the Next Eli Lilly?

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Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY) has become a giant in what may be a $100 billion market a few years from now. I'm talking about the world of weight loss drugs.

Doctors have been prescribing Mounjaro and the newly approved Zepbound to patients aiming to shed pounds, and that's brought in billions in revenue to the pharma giant. These drugs work by acting on glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP), two hormone pathways involved in the digestion process.

But in the coming years, Lilly could face competition from a young biotech that was founded in 2012 called Viking Therapeutics (NASDAQ: VKTX). This new kid on the block is developing a drug candidate that works in the same way as the Lilly drugs and recently reported excellent clinical trial data.

The news was so good that Viking's share price soared 120% in just one trading session. Is this potential biotech star on its way to becoming the next Eli Lilly?

An investor at home looks at something on a laptop and takes notes.
Image source: Getty Images.

Lilly's weight-loss drugs

First, let's consider Lilly's business. Though weight loss drugs are becoming a bigger and bigger part of the company's revenue picture, Lilly is well diversified across treatment areas. It sells a vast portfolio of products in specialties such as immunology, neuroscience, and cancer.

In the most recent quarter, Lilly's treatments delivered more than $9.3 billion in revenue, representing 28% growth year over year. Most of these drugs each posted revenue increases, so Lilly's growth is broad-based, driven by a great number of products.

However, weight loss drugs are leading the way. In the quarter, Mounjaro represented more than 20% of Lilly's revenue.

It's important to remember this drug actually is approved for type 2 diabetes, so the revenue gain isn't linked to weight loss demand only. But two other elements point to the high growth potential of this treatment area: Demand for Lilly's Mounjaro and Zepbound has exceeded supply in recent times, and Zepbound generated more than $175 million in revenue in only its first few weeks on the market

Now let's consider Viking Therapeutics. The company's weight-loss candidate VK-2735 met primary and secondary endpoints in its phase 2 trial. Volunteers given VK-2735 reached as much as 13.1% mean weight loss after 13 weeks of treatment. The candidate also was safe and well tolerated, with most adverse events falling into the mild-to-moderate category.

Viking aims to advance the candidate toward the finish line, so the next step likely will be the launch of a phase 3 trial. The company says it's involved in discussions with regulators to decide its next move.