Hims & Hers (Hims) stock plummeted nearly 35% Monday after Novo Nordisk (NGO) announced it was ending a collaboration to make its blockbuster weight-loss drug, Wegovy, available on Hims’ telehealth platform.
Novo Nordisk said that Hims & Hers was breaking the law by continuing to sell copycat semaglutide, the key ingredient in Wegovy, alongside Novo’s branded drugs.
“Hims & Hers … has failed to adhere to the law which prohibits mass sales of compounded drugs under the false guise of ‘personalization,'” Novo said in a statement Monday. Novo shares lost around 5.5%.
Hims & Hers decline to respond to Yahoo Finance’s request for comment, but CEO Andrew Dudum posted on X several hours later, claiming that Novo’s commercial team was pressuring it to “steer patients to Wegovy.”
“We refuse to be strong-armed by any pharmaceutical company’s anticompetitive demands that infringe on the independent decision making of providers and limit patient choice,” Dudum said in the post.
The duo announced a collaboration last month that would allow patients to directly purchase Wegovy through Hims’ telehealth platform. The agreement followed a growing trend among pharma companies, including Novo’s competitor Eli Lilly (LLY) to fill the access gap after copycat, or compounded, GLP-1s were forced off the market.
Compounded drugs were available when Lilly and Novo struggled to produce enough of their GLP-1s to meet the unexpected and unprecedented demand spike in the weight-loss market. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allows for copycats to be sold when a drug is in short supply without undergoing the same trial requirements as the branded drugs.
Since the shortage has ended for both companies’ drugs, some compounding pharmacies have continued to make copycats — mostly for Novo’s semaglutide. They intend to continue and are allowed to do so due to a loophole that allows patients to have access to “personalized” medicine if they need adjustments to a branded product for reasons like tolerability or allergies.
Lilly is also faced with how to manage some telehealth platforms that continue to offer compounded products, including Novo Nordisk’s, which Lilly included in its concerns.
Hims & Hers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In addition to the latest ding to the company’s stock, investors are expecting Hims & Hers to grow at a slower clip than in the recent past.
Hims has been riding the highs (and sometimes volatile swings) in GLP-1 news, especially as it relates to the availability of the copycat drugs. But it is also showing weakness in overall subscriptions to its telehealth platform, according to Bank of America analyst Allen Lutz.
Revenue growth year over year has slowed sharply from roughly 45% in the third quarter of 2024 to 29% in the first quarter of this year. In addition, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) will implement a new rule in July making it easier for customers to cancel subscriptions with one click, which “could impact HIMS churn by simplifying subscription cancellations,” Lutz said.
Meanwhile, pressure from Congress and the federal government to end direct-to-consumer marketing for pharmaceutical sales could impact Hims, which faced backlash after it advertised compounded GLP-1s during the Super Bowl in February.
But there is one potential bright spot, according to Lutz. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT), a potentially $3 billion to $10 billion market, could add $4 million to $12 million for Hims in 2025.
“HIMS has a strong history of scaling new categories quickly and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is the next opportunity,” Lutz wrote. “HIMS’ DTC (direct-to-consumer) offering is likely to expand the current addressable market over time given strong brand recognition.”
This story has been updated to include Hims & Hers CEO comments from X.
Anjalee Kachmli is the senior health reporter at Yahoo Finance, covering all things pharma, insurance, care services, digital health, PBMs, and health policy and politics. That includes GLP-1s, of course. Follow Anjalee as AnjKhem on social media platforms X, LinkedIn, and Bluesky @Anjkhem.