Analysis-Innovent’s weight-loss drug highlights China challenge for Novo, Lilly

Analysis-Innovent’s weight-loss drug highlights China challenge for Novo, Lilly

Analysis-Innovent’s weight-loss drug highlights China challenge for Novo, Lilly

By Andrew Silver

SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Innovent Biologics’ newly launched weight-loss drug is making inroads in its home market of China, ramping up competition with its Western rivals as it pursues a marketing strategy that is gaining traction.

Xinermei, launched in July, is the third once-weekly injectable GLP-1 weight management therapy available in China after Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro.

Those were introduced in late 2024 and January 2025 respectively, several months after their own approvals, into a Chinese weight-loss drug market that is expected by analysts to be worth billions in the coming years.

While it joined the race late, Innovent’s goals included raising awareness of weight management in society and emphasising the drug’s proven ability to reduce liver fat in front of key customers, Chief Financial Officer Rachel You said on an earnings call last month.

“Chinese companies may have an advantage in the Chinese market understanding branding and consumers better compared to foreign companies,” said Allan von Mehren, a Copenhagen-based economist at Danske Bank.

The market share of weight-loss drugs in China is opaque, with firms including Innovent and Lilly not disclosing sales figures. Lilly said in a statement that it was positioned to “deliver valuable treatment options to patients.”

Novo, which is cutting 9,000 jobs globally as it faces rising competition from Lilly and others, said it had a “market-leading position” in China.

Sales of obesity care products in Novo’s greater China region in the second quarter of 2025 amounted to about 158 million Danish crowns ($24.8 million), a Reuters calculation based on data from Novo investor presentations showed, down sharply from 704 million Danish crowns in the first quarter.

Asked about the decline, Novo said “there have been some stock movements quarter over quarter”.

Morningstar forecast Xinermei, also known as mazdutide, would contribute more than 600 million yuan ($84.4 million) to Innovent this year before reaching peak sales of 3.5 billion yuan in 2029, accounting for about 20% of Innovent’s revenue.

By comparison, Novo’s Wegovy sales in China are estimated at roughly 2.2 billion Danish crowns ($346 million) this year and are expected to grow by another 30% in 2026 and then decline due to generic competition, according to the research firm’s forecast.

Morningstar said it did not have sales estimates for Lilly’s Mounjaro in China.

Innovent’s shares have risen about 155% since the start of the year amid a broader rally for Chinese biotech companies, compared to a 38% fall for Novo and a nearly 3% decline for Lilly.