Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) traded around $1,059 on Friday after briefly reaching a $1 trillion market capitalization, becoming the first health-care company to achieve the milestone.
Eli Lilly and Company, LLY
The stock’s upward momentum reflects strong investor confidence as the company cements its leadership in the fast-growing diabetes and obesity treatment markets.
Eli Lilly’s brief surge past the $1 trillion mark places it in a club long dominated by technology giants. It is only the second non-tech company in the U.S. to reach the threshold, following Berkshire Hathaway. The stock has climbed more than 36% this year, driven by explosive demand for its GLP-1 treatments.
Investors view Lilly as the current leader in the drug class at the center of a global health transformation. The company continues to widen its lead over chief rival Novo Nordisk in the obesity and diabetes market.
The company’s third-quarter results showcased the scale of its momentum. Mounjaro generated $6.52 billion, up 109% year-over-year, becoming one of the fastest-growing drugs in pharmaceutical history. Zepbound posted $3.59 billion, a 184% annual increase, reflecting overwhelming consumer demand.
Analysts expect demand to expand as insurance coverage grows and regulatory approvals increase across new regions. Eli Lilly plans to release oral versions of its GLP-1 drugs next year, which could broaden access and streamline production.
Eli Lilly was founded in 1876 and introduced the first commercial insulin in 1923. Its history includes breakthroughs such as Prozac and one of the earliest polio vaccines. The modern transformation began in 2022 with tirzepatide’s approval for diabetes under the brand Mounjaro, offering a dual-hormone approach that reduces appetite while improving metabolic function.
The drug quickly achieved blockbuster status, surpassing $1 billion in its first full year. Lilly later gained approval for Zepbound, its obesity version, positioning the company as a leader across both weight loss and diabetes care.
Though Eli Lilly maintains a clear lead, the competition remains fierce. Novo Nordisk continues to expand its presence, while Pfizer escalated its position by winning a $10 billion bid for obesity-drug developer Metsera. Analysts estimate the obesity drug market could exceed $150 billion by the early 2030s, creating space for multiple major players.
Eli Lilly’s surge into the trillion-dollar tier reflects more than a stock rally. It signals a shift toward long-term dominance in metabolic health treatments. With soaring demand, expanding coverage, and major new product versions on the horizon, the company appears positioned to remain a defining force in the next decade of global health care.
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