Why Is Novo Nordisk Stock Down 13% Premarket? Trial Fails to Match Eli Lilly
Image courtesy of 123rf.com

Why Is Novo Nordisk Stock Down 13% Premarket? Trial Fails to Match Eli Lilly

Novo Nordisk stock plunged over 13% in premarket trading after its experimental obesity drug CagriSema failed to prove non-inferiority to Eli Lilly's tirzepatide in the REDEFINE 4 trial.
Neither the author, Tim Fries, nor this website, The Tokenist, provide financial advice. Please consult our website policy prior to making financial decisions.

Novo Nordisk (NVO) shares are tumbling in premarket trading on Monday, February 23, 2026, after the Danish pharmaceutical giant disclosed that its next-generation obesity drug CagriSema failed to match the weight-loss efficacy of Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide in a direct head-to-head clinical trial. The disappointing result marks another setback for Novo Nordisk as it battles to defend its position in the highly competitive and fast-growing obesity treatment market.

Coming on top of a brutal 2025 in which NVO shares already shed roughly 49%, the fresh trial failure is intensifying investor concerns about the company’s ability to compete with Lilly’s Zepbound going forward.

CagriSema Misses Primary Endpoint

In a statement released Monday morning, Novo Nordisk confirmed that CagriSema did not meet the primary endpoint of the REDEFINE 4 trial, an open-label head-to-head study designed to demonstrate that CagriSema was at least as effective as Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide in reducing body weight.

According to Bloomberg, participants on a standard dose of CagriSema achieved 20.2% weight loss after 84 weeks, while Reuters reported a 23% figure for the broader trial cohort – both falling short of tirzepatide’s 25.5% reduction. The trial had originally been initiated at a time when Novo Nordisk expected CagriSema could actually outperform Zepbound, according to UBS analyst Colin White, making the miss all the more striking.

CagriSema was viewed as a cornerstone of Novo Nordisk’s long-term competitive strategy. The drug combines semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic, with a compound that mimics the gut hormone amylin, a mechanism designed to push weight-loss results beyond what semaglutide alone can deliver.

However, the drug has now posted mixed results across multiple studies, including a prior large obesity trial that also failed to hit Novo’s internal weight-loss targets. Novo said additional trials are ongoing to explore higher-dose combinations and the drug’s fuller potential.

The market reaction was swift and severe. Copenhagen-listed shares of Novo Nordisk fell roughly 11–13% by mid-morning European trading, while Eli Lilly shares surged as much as 4.2% in U.S. premarket trading, briefly touching $1,049.94. The divergence underscores the shifting competitive landscape in the GLP-1 and obesity drug space, where clinical efficacy data increasingly drives market share expectations.

Join our Telegram group and never miss a breaking digital asset story.

NVO Stock Brief: Premarket Price and Key Metrics

As of the premarket session on February 23, 2026 at 5:27 AM EST, NVO was trading at $40.99, down $6.43 or 13.56% from the prior session’s closing price of $47.42. The stock had already closed down 2.13% on Friday, February 20, reflecting broader pressure on the name heading into the weekend.

With the premarket move, NVO has now fallen approximately 44.68% over the past year and 7.42% year-to-date, dramatically underperforming its benchmark, the OMX Copenhagen 25 Index, which is down just 3.40% over the same one-year period.

Despite the sharp decline, some valuation metrics suggest the stock may be approaching value territory. NVO currently trades at a trailing P/E of just 12.96 and carries a forward dividend yield of 3.92%, with an ex-dividend date of March 30, 2026. The 52-week range spans $43.08 to $93.80, meaning the stock is now trading near multi-year lows.

The consensus analyst price target sits at $53.98, implying meaningful upside from current levels, and the most recent analyst action, an Outperform initiation by CICC in January 2026 with a $73.50 price target, reflects that some on Wall Street see the selloff as overdone.

Novo Nordisk does retain significant financial strengths: a profit margin of 33%, return on equity of over 60%, and Q4 FY25 EPS of $6.04 that beat the $5.90 estimate. The company is also undergoing a leadership refresh, with Lars Rebien Sorensen installed as board chairman and two drug industry veterans nominated to the board.

Whether these operational and governance changes can translate into a credible competitive response to Eli Lilly, particularly as patents on Wegovy and Ozempic approach expiration, remains the central question for investors weighing the stock at these depressed levels.

Disclaimer: The author does not hold or have a position in any securities discussed in the article. All stock prices were quoted at the time of writing.