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By Maggie Fick and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Novo Nordisk reported forecast-beating third-quarter sales of its popular Wegovy weight-loss drug on Wednesday, reassuring investors worried that demand was slowing and it could lose the race in the fast-growing obesity drug market.
Shares in Novo Nordisk, which competes with Eli Lilly in an obesity drug market that some analysts forecast could be worth about $150 billion by the early 2030s, rose nearly 9%.
They reversed course later in the day, when the company's management told investors that its sales growth rate next year could be in the high teens in percentage terms, below the 21% growth forecast by analysts.
The shares were up 1.1% at 1525 GMT.
Sales of Wegovy totalled 17.3 billion Danish crowns ($2.5 billion) in the third quarter, ahead of the 15.9 billion expected by analysts in a company-compiled consensus and up 48% from the previous quarter.
The Danish drugmaker said it has tripled Wegovy production over the last three years and will continue to ramp up at the same pace.
"We still have a situation where there are far more patients who would like to have the treatment than what both Eli Lilly and we can supply," CEO Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen told Reuters.
But total group sales, which rose 21% to 71.3 billion crowns, came below the 72.3 billion crowns expected by analysts due to weaker-than-expected diabetes drug Ozempic sales.
Novo said U.S. sales growth was hurt by the phasing out of rebates - volume-based discounts negotiated by pharmaceutical companies with U.S. pharmacy benefit managers - in 2023.
Investors had feared the drugmaker would cut its outlook on Wednesday, so the third-quarter results came as somewhat of a relief, said Terence McManus, fund manager at Switzerland's Bellevue Asset Management, which holds Novo shares.
"However, we don't see these results as an all-clear signal on the stock," he said.
The company is due to release data before the end of this year from a late-stage trial of CagriSema, a two-drug combination obesity treatment that like Wegovy is injected.
Novo expects CagriSema to lead to weight loss of 25%, compared with Wegovy's 15%, a result which analysts say is a must-win for Novo's obesity-tackling investment case.
The Wegovy sales beat was a relief, though pricing pressure in the United States was slightly worse than they expected, analysts said.
Investors were nervous ahead of the results, after U.S. rival Eli Lilly last week posted results for its weight-loss drug Zepbound sales that fell short of expectations.