Eli Lilly delivered fantastic third-quarter results, largely thanks to tirzepatide.
The company’s current lineup and pipeline make the stock attractive.
The drugmaker is also looking to become an AI leader in its industry.
Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY) performed poorly for much of the year. However, the company is rebounding and has, for the most part, caught up with the S&P 500 year to date.
A solid clinical win for a promising candidate helped jolt the stock a few months ago. And just last week, the company’s latest quarterly update provided yet another boost. Here is why Eli Lilly is a strong buy following its blowout third-quarter earnings.
The market had high expectations for Eli Lilly going into its quarterly update, as it has for a while. Eli Lilly’s forward price-to-earnings ratio has been much higher than that of its similarly sized competitor and the healthcare industry average, which is currently 17.1.
Even slightly above-average results would have elicited little more than a chorus of shrugs from Wall Street. But Eli Lilly did better than that. The company’s revenue came in at $17.6 billion, 54% higher than the year-ago period — an outrageous top-line growth rate for a pharmaceutical giant. Eli Lilly is increasing its sales at a rate we’d expect from a much smaller tech company. On the bottom line, Eli Lilly’s non-GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) earnings per share were $7.02, 495% higher than the prior-year quarter.
To no one’s surprise, Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide, sold under the brand names Mounjaro and Zepbound, drove this performance. Tirzepatide’s total revenue in the quarter came in at $10.1 billion, more than doubling compared to Q3 2024. There was plenty more to like about Eli Lilly’s quarterly update. The company now expects revenue of $63 billion to $63.5 billion for the fiscal year 2025, up from its previous projection of $60 billion to $62 billion. Eli Lilly’s new guidance implies year-over-year revenue growth of 40.6% at the midpoint.
Eli Lilly’s financial results are already fantastic, but the stock looks even more attractive when looking at ongoing developments. Here are three.
First, the company is looking to cement its dominance in the rapidly growing weight management market. After posting successful phase 3 clinical trials for its investigational oral GLP-1 candidate, orforglipron, this year, Eli Lilly is racing toward approval for the medicine, literally. The company is benefiting from a new voucher program in the U.S. that allows the Food and Drug Administration to approve a new drug in a couple of months, rather than the usual 10 months.