Today: 10 June 2026
Eli Lilly Raises 2026 Forecast as Mounjaro, Zepbound Sales Keep Weight-Loss Boom Alive
30 April 2026
2 mins read

Eli Lilly Raises 2026 Forecast as Mounjaro, Zepbound Sales Keep Weight-Loss Boom Alive

Indianapolis, April 30, 2026, 08:01 EDT

  • Lilly bumped up its 2026 revenue forecast by $2 billion after posting a 56% surge in first-quarter sales.
  • Quarterly sales for Mounjaro and Zepbound hit roughly $12.8 billion, with investors squarely watching GLP-1 demand.
  • Pricing risk remains; realized prices have slipped, early Foundayo uncertainties linger, and Novo Nordisk competition is still a cloud over the stock.

Eli Lilly hiked its full-year outlook for both sales and profit Thursday, following a jump in quarterly revenue driven by strong uptake of its diabetes drug Mounjaro and obesity therapy Zepbound. First-quarter revenue climbed 56% to $19.8 billion, according to the Indianapolis-based company, with adjusted earnings coming in at $8.55 per share.

Lilly’s numbers are drawing attention as the company looks to turn the worldwide surge in GLP-1 drugs — which mimic a gut hormone and help regulate appetite and blood sugar — into stronger sales, despite pricing headwinds. The company reported that higher sales volumes more than made up for lower realized prices, the figure Lilly pockets after rebates and discounts.

Lilly is now projecting revenue for 2026 between $82 billion and $85 billion, raising its outlook from the earlier $80 billion to $83 billion range. The company also bumped its adjusted earnings guidance to $35.50 to $37.00 per share, up from $33.50 to $35.00. That tops the $34.55 analysts were looking for, according to LSEG figures cited by Reuters.

Mounjaro hauled in $8.7 billion in sales, more than doubling from a year earlier and coming in over $1 billion above what analysts had penciled in. Zepbound brought in $4.2 billion for the quarter, handily topping expectations as well. Lilly shares climbed in premarket trade, with investors shrugging off concerns about pricing and zeroing in on strong demand.

“2026 is off to a strong start,” said Lilly CEO David Ricks, who noted the company bumped up its full-year revenue outlook by $2 billion. Ricks highlighted the recent U.S. approval of Foundayo, Lilly’s oral GLP-1 pill, saying it could expand access outside of the injectable market. Eli Lilly and Company

Foundayo is up next. The pill rolled out in early April, missing Lilly’s first-quarter tally, though investors have started tracking whether it can catch up to Novo Nordisk’s oral Wegovy, which arrived in the U.S. market sooner.

Evan Seigerman at BMO Capital Markets called it “too early” to draw conclusions on the Foundayo launch, with just two weeks of data in hand. Over at Bellevue Asset Management, Terence McManus pointed out that those initial numbers could overlook direct-to-consumer sales. He added, investors typically need at least five or six weeks before the data starts to give a clearer picture. Reuters

Novo still shapes the competitive landscape. The Danish company set the pace in obesity treatments with Wegovy, but since Zepbound hit the scene in late 2023, Lilly has grabbed share. The next battleground: pills, not just weekly shots—a shift that could draw in people turned off by injectables.

Risks remain. Lilly flagged that lower realized prices weighed on revenue growth. Investors are keeping a close eye on U.S. reimbursement for obesity drugs, as well as how quickly Foundayo catches on, and pressure from lower-cost rivals abroad. Federal coverage for these drugs is still a wild card—Kevin Gade, chief operating officer at Bahl & Gaynor, described the uncertainty as one of the “sources of angst” for Lilly shareholders. Reuters

Even so, Lilly’s results underscored just how crucial its obesity and diabetes drugs are to the company’s market value. Net income surged to $7.4 billion, up from $2.8 billion the previous year. Non-GAAP net income hit $7.7 billion, as Mounjaro and Zepbound delivered again and charges related to acquired in-process R&D fell from last year’s levels.

Stock Market Today

  • CMR Green Technologies Shares Surge 43% on Debut; Investors Weigh Buy or Sell
    June 10, 2026, 1:19 AM EDT. CMR Green Technologies shares debuted on the BSE at a 43% premium, exceeding the expected 35% gain, following a 127-fold oversubscription in its IPO. The stock listed at Rs 275.40, valuing the company at Rs 6,033 crore. Despite strong demand, experts warn of thin operating margins and high customer concentration, suggesting investors consider profit booking or cautious monitoring. The recycler serves major automotive clients such as Honda and Bajaj, operating 13 facilities across India and abroad. This strong listing performance prompts debate on whether to hold for long-term growth or sell to lock in gains, with attention on future quarterly results and business execution.

Latest articles

Nasdaq Sees More Moves After Hours Following U.S. Strike on Iran

Nasdaq Sees More Moves After Hours Following U.S. Strike on Iran

10 June 2026
U.S. stock futures fell after hours and oil rose as U.S. strikes on Iran fueled risk-off sentiment, deepening losses in tech shares and raising investor caution ahead of Wednesday’s key inflation report, with fears of Fed rate hikes and volatility from the upcoming SpaceX IPO adding pressure.
Keel Slides After $458 Million AI Data-Center Debt Deal Launch

Keel Slides After $458 Million AI Data-Center Debt Deal Launch

10 June 2026
Keel Infrastructure shares plunged 4.24% to $5.42 after closing a $458 million convertible debt sale, reviving investor fears of future dilution even as the company boosts funding for AI-focused data-center projects; shares slipped further to $5.32 after hours on more than double average volume, reflecting concerns over execution risks and the impact of new financing.
Super Micro sinks after $7B AI server plan; dilution a risk

Super Micro sinks after $7B AI server plan; dilution a risk

10 June 2026
Super Micro Computer plans to raise $7 billion through equity and equity-linked financing to fund soaring AI server orders, sending shares down about 9% in after-hours trading as investors focused on dilution risk; the company reported $39 billion in recent AI server orders, but noted these are not firm commitments and cited ongoing legal and regulatory risks.
American Airlines Stock Rises on Google Fuel Deal, Market Watches for Fuel Shock

American Airlines Stock Rises on Google Fuel Deal, Market Watches for Fuel Shock

10 June 2026
American Airlines surged to $14.09, up 48.5 cents, after announcing a three-year sustainable aviation fuel deal with Google covering 35 million gallons, as investors focused on surging fuel costs that jumped 78% in April to $6.5 billion; the stock rose in line with airline peers amid a drop in crude prices, while American’s 2026 outlook remains pressured by higher fuel expenses and a narrowed profit forecast.
Nokia Drops 7% After Nvidia 6G Chatter Hits AI Stocks

Nokia Drops 7% After Nvidia 6G Chatter Hits AI Stocks

10 June 2026
Nokia shares plunged 6.99% to 11.970 euros in Helsinki after reports of Nvidia’s push into future mobile-network tech raised fears over Nokia’s AI-driven growth story, with investors questioning whether Nokia can maintain its edge as competition intensifies and its forward P/E more than doubles this year.
Caterpillar Earnings Beat: AI Data Center Power Demand Drives a Q1 Surprise for CAT Stock
Previous Story

Caterpillar Earnings Beat: AI Data Center Power Demand Drives a Q1 Surprise for CAT Stock

FuelCell Energy Stock Jumps as AI Power Boom Puts FCEL Back in Play
Next Story

FuelCell Energy Stock Jumps as AI Power Boom Puts FCEL Back in Play

Go toTop