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Danish weight-loss drug maker Novo Nordisk announces blockbuster profits

Danish pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk posted bumper profits for 2023 on Wednesday, driven by surging sales of diabetes and obesity treatments that helped it become Europe's most valuable company.

Danish weight-loss drug maker Novo Nordisk announces blockbuster profits
Novo Nordisk executives Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen and Karsten Munk Knudsen brief media at the company's headquarters in Bagsværd near Copenhagen on January 31st, after annual results revealed huge sales for the drugmaker. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

The century-old company has also turned into a major driver of Denmark’s economy as sales of diabetes medication Ozempic and obesity drug Wegovy have boomed.

Novo Nordisk said its net profit rose 51 percent to 83.7 billion kroner last year — more than 1.5 billion kroner higher than forecast by analysts surveyed by financial data firm FactSet.

It said sales for obesity and diabetes drugs surged by 42 percent at constant exchange rates to 215.1 billion kroner last year.

READ ALSO: Obesity drugs give Danish economy a major boost

Overall sales rose by 36 percent to 232.3 billion kroner in 2023.

“It looks like Novo Nordisk can explain all of the growth in the Danish economy in 2023 and that it will be just as important this year,” Danske Bank chief analyst Las Olsen told AFP.

He cited the company’s effect on job creation, tax contributions and dividends paid to shareholders.

Denmark’s economy is expected to grow by 1.7 percent in 2023, according to a central bank forecast

‘Strong performance’
   
Ozempic, an injectable medication, became wildly popular on social networks for its slimming properties even though its intended use is to combat diabetes.

It also makes Wegovy, which has the same active ingredient as Ozempic in a different dose and was approved by US regulators to treat obesity.

The treatments are popular among celebrities and their success have turned Novo Nordisk into a darling of investors who drove up the company’s shares so high last year that it became Europe’s largest group by market capitalisation.

“We are very pleased with the strong performance in 2023 reflecting that more than 40 million people are now benefiting from our innovative diabetes and obesity treatments,” chief executive Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen said in a statement.

“We continue to make progress on our strategic aspirations. Our focus in 2024 will be on reaching more patients, progressing and expanding our pipeline as well as the continued significant expansion of our production capacity,” he added.

In 2023, Novo Nordisk invested around 75 billion kroner to expand its production sites, which have struggled to meet rising demand.

The investments concern primarily two sites in Denmark and one in France.

Ozempic top seller

More than 10 percent of the world’s population suffers from diabetes, with the number of adult diabetics seen rising by 46 percent by 2045, according to the International Diabetes Federation.

Ozempic is now the world’s top-selling diabetes drug, with Novo Nordisk holding 33.8 percent of the market.

It is officially only prescribed for diabetes, though it has become popular for its weight-loss properties.

Wegovy is an anti-obesity treatment that was launched in the United States in 2021 and is now also available in Denmark, Germany, Norway and the UK.

Sales of Wegovy soared by 154 percent in 2023.

The World Health Organization says more than a billion people suffer from obesity, a chronic condition that increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, some forms of cancer and complications, such as with Covid-19. 

Obesity, which is notoriously difficult and costly to treat, may be caused by lifestyle factors as well as genetics.

If prevention and medical treatments don’t improve, the World Obesity Federation says it expects half of the world’s population, 51 percent, to be either overweight or obese by 2035.

According to its calculations, the economic impact of such a development would exceed $4 trillion per year.

Novo Nordisk, which has 64,000 employees in 80 countries, said it expected its overall sales to increase by 18-26 percent in 2024.

Danske Bank analyst Olsen noted that while Novo Nordisk’s growth “cannot go on forever”, the “income, investment and knowledge from the current success will continue to benefit Denmark, as long as we maintain a flexible economy that can handle future shocks.”

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BUSINESS

Danish meat producer to close major factory and scrap 1,200 jobs

Denmark’s biggest company in one of its largest industries, meat producer Danish Crown has announced the closure of its factory in Zealand town Ringsted, meaning 1,200 jobs will be lost.

Danish meat producer to close major factory and scrap 1,200 jobs

The company announced the closure of its Ringsted factory in a statement on Monday in which it also said workers whose roles will be scrapped will be offered training or positions at Danish Crown sites elsewhere in the country.

The closure of the Ringsted factory, scheduled for September, will mean that 1,200 jobs at that plant will cease to exist. Restructuring by the company will give 300 new jobs at Danish Crown factories in Jutland towns Horsens, Herning, Vejen and Sønderborg.

Danish Crown CEO Jais Valeur told newswire Ritzau that the company had taken a “heavy decision” to close the Ringsted factory.

“We have attempted to get ahead of the curve by taking a drastic step and not just adapting capacity to what we are seeing here and now but looking forwards and seeing that what is needed purely in terms of overheads is to close Ringsted,” he said.

The decision means the company will be able to avoid similar “adaptations” in future, he said.

The company said that the decision is a consequence of the decline in the number of pigs slaughtered in the last two years, reducing the efficiency of its existing facilities in Denmark.

Future business models will increase focus on export of products such as bacon and pepperoni within Europe, Valeur said.

Pork production in Denmark fell by 17 percent between 2021 and 2023, according to Danish Crown’s accounts.

This decrease has meant that slaughtering capacity at the company has been too large.

“There is greatly increased competition from China and the USA, so we are now focusing much more on the European market where we can see that there is demand for Danish bacon and pepperoni,” Valeur said.

The company said it expects to have enough jobs for employees who are willing to relocate to one of the group’s four Jutland plants.

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