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Unlike typical drugs with inelastic demand, the market for GLP-1s is price-elastic. Eli Lilly's CEO confirms that lowering prices directly expands the user base, creating a rare instance where capitalist incentives align with broader consumer access in the pharmaceutical industry.

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By negotiating prices down from over $1,000 to as low as $150 per month, the government deal fundamentally shifts Ozempic's market position. It is no longer a high-end luxury akin to plastic surgery but an accessible wellness product comparable to a fancy gym membership, dramatically expanding its addressable market.

The surge in use of compounded GLP-1s, costing about half the price of branded versions, demonstrates huge untapped demand. Patients are willing to accept manufacturing and safety risks for affordability, proving price is a major barrier to adoption.

The two pharma giants are competing aggressively in the direct-to-consumer channel. They're cutting prices on their GLP-1 drugs, anticipating that lower costs will drive significantly higher volume and sales in the long run, even if it hurts short-term revenue forecasts.

David Ricks notes that typical medications for chronic diseases often make patients feel worse while mitigating a long-term risk. GLP-1s are different because they work almost universally and provide a positive, tangible outcome (weight loss) that people actively desire. This positive feedback loop drives powerful adherence and adoption.

The emergence of low-cost, compounded versions of GLP-1 drugs from telehealth companies like Hims is creating significant pricing pressure on market leaders Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly. This dynamic has pushed the pharma giants toward direct-to-consumer models with lower prices to compete.

In explosive markets like GLP-1 drugs, significant price drops and margin compression (e.g., from 80% to 60%) don't necessarily harm profits. The sheer volume of new customers can completely offset lower per-unit profitability, leading to far greater overall earnings.

The key catalyst for GLP-1 weight-loss drugs becoming mainstream wasn't just effectiveness, but a drastic price drop. Moving from over $1,000/month to as low as $25/month with insurance transformed the drug from a luxury good into an accessible, subscription-like product, paving the way for mass adoption.

Eli Lilly bypassed traditional pharmacy channels with its 'Lilly Direct' program, which cut consumer prices by 60%. Counterintuitively for pharmaceuticals, they found pricing is highly elastic: the more they lower the price, the more users they acquire, which ultimately grows the business.

Eli Lilly's oral GLP-1 is proving to be a market expander, not just a cannibalizer of injectables. An overwhelming 80% of its users are new to the GLP-1 class, driven by an aggressive direct-to-consumer (DTC) telehealth strategy. This signals a vast, untapped patient population for oral obesity treatments.

The agreement between the Trump administration and pharma on Mounjaro/Ozempic pricing ratified a new "large market, medium price" benchmark. This fundamentally expands the industry's total addressable market beyond the old "small market, high price" model for rare diseases, suggesting a major long-term growth driver.