<code id='167024B0AE'></code><style id='167024B0AE'></style>
    • <acronym id='167024B0AE'></acronym>
      <center id='167024B0AE'><center id='167024B0AE'><tfoot id='167024B0AE'></tfoot></center><abbr id='167024B0AE'><dir id='167024B0AE'><tfoot id='167024B0AE'></tfoot><noframes id='167024B0AE'>

    • <optgroup id='167024B0AE'><strike id='167024B0AE'><sup id='167024B0AE'></sup></strike><code id='167024B0AE'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='167024B0AE'><label id='167024B0AE'><select id='167024B0AE'><dt id='167024B0AE'><span id='167024B0AE'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='167024B0AE'></u>
          <i id='167024B0AE'><strike id='167024B0AE'><tt id='167024B0AE'><pre id='167024B0AE'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          Home / comprehensive / comprehensive

          comprehensive


          comprehensive

          author:knowledge    Page View:491
          Christine Kao/STAT

          There’s a specter haunting Wall Street.

          It started in biotech, where companies making drugs for the obesity-related liver disease NASH saw their valuations crash on the assumption that GLP-1 weight loss treatments would cut them out of the market. Then the Ozempic panic came for dialysis firms, whose stocks fell about 20% in a single day on the news that Novo Nordisk’s medicine had delayed the progression of kidney disease in a study enrolling people with type 2 diabetes.

          advertisement

          Now analysts from every sector are cranking out research notes on the disparate, dramatic, and often debatable implications of GLP-1 drugs’ growing popularity, said Jared Holz, a health care specialist at Mizuho Securities. Buy Bumble, sell McDonald’s. Short Pepsi, go long Louis Vuitton. Put your money in sectors that cater to a svelte and sated brand of consumer, and get out of the ones that rely on excess and compulsion.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In