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Why Eli Lilly Just Became Healthcare's First Trillion-Dollar Giant (And What Comes Next)
Elι Lilly hit a historic milestone this week: the first healthcare company ever to crack $1 trillion in market cap. But here’s what matters — it’s not just about the number. It’s about what’s actually driving this explosion.
The GLP-1 Cash Machine
Two drugs. Mounjaro (diabetes) and Zepbound (obesity). That’s it. That’s 50%+ of Lilly’s entire revenue — nearly $25 billion in the first nine months of 2025 alone. For a company generating billions across oncology, immunology, and neuroscience, having half your revenue concentrated in two products is either genius or a huge risk depending on how you look at it.
What’s wild: these drugs have only been on the market for three years. The obesity market alone is projected to hit $100 billion by 2030, and Lilly’s already capturing a lion’s share.
The Real Battleground: Second-Gen Drugs
But Lilly knows the competition is heating up. Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide (Ozempic/Wegovy) is nipping at heels. Viking Therapeutics just ran enrollment for VK2735 at breakneck speed. Pfizer just dropped $10 billion to buy Metsera and get back in the obesity game.
So what’s Lilly doing? Playing long-term:
The playbook: dominate current generation, lock in the next generation before competitors do.
The Valuation Reality Check
Here’s where it gets tricky: LLY is trading at 32.78x forward P/E vs. industry average of 17.05x. That’s a premium, but not crazy — it’s below the five-year mean of 34.54x.
EPS estimates for 2025-2026 have been revised up in the last 30 days, which usually signals confidence. But the real question: can Lilly keep this momentum when oral GLP-1s (easier to use, lower cost) start hitting the market?
Bottom Line
Lilly’s trillion-dollar status isn’t a victory lap — it’s a starting gun. The obesity space is about to get packed. Winners will be decided on:
Lilly’s position is strong, but the runway is getting crowded. Watch this space in 2026.