The GLP-1 Race Goes Oral: FDA Approves Lilly’s Foundayo, Reshaping the Obesity Market and the Competitive Landscape

The FDA approved Eli Lilly’s (NYSE: LLY) Foundayo (orforglipron) today, a once-daily oral GLP-1 receptor agonist for adults with obesity or overweight with weight-related medical conditions. The approval marks a pivotal shift in one of the fastest-growing drug categories in history — and for small and microcap investors, the ripple effects are worth paying close attention to.

Foundayo joins Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy pill as the only two oral GLP-1 medications with FDA approval, but Lilly is positioning its drug as the more flexible option. Unlike the Wegovy pill, which must be taken in the morning 30 minutes before eating or drinking, Foundayo can be taken at any time of day and without restrictions on food and water.

It’s worth noting that Lilly is having one of the busiest 24-hour stretches in recent memory. Yesterday, the company announced a definitive agreement to acquire Centessa Pharmaceuticals for up to $47.00 per share — a deal valued at approximately $7.8 billion — to bolster its neuroscience pipeline in sleep-wake disorders. [Related: Eli Lilly Banks $6.3 Billion on Sleep Science with Centessa Pharmaceuticals Acquisition] Today’s FDA approval underscores just how aggressively Lilly is moving across multiple therapeutic fronts simultaneously.

The Numbers Behind the Pill

In the ATTAIN-1 trial, patients receiving the highest dose who remained on treatment lost a mean of 27.3 pounds (12.4%) compared with 2.2 pounds (0.9%) among those receiving placebo. That’s meaningfully below the 20%+ weight loss seen with injectable GLP-1s like Zepbound, but Lilly isn’t positioning this as a replacement — it’s positioning it as an on-ramp.

Analysts estimate Foundayo sales will reach $14.79 billion by 2030, compared to expectations of $24.68 billion for Zepbound. On pricing, eligible people with commercial insurance may pay as little as $25 per month, self-pay patients can access it starting at $149 per month, and eligible Medicare Part D patients may access it for $50 per month beginning July 1, 2026.

The FDA reviewed the Foundayo application in just 50 days under a Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher pilot program, making it the fastest approval of a new molecular entity since 2002. That regulatory speed is its own headline.

What This Means for the Broader Market

The oral GLP-1 approval isn’t just a Lilly story — it’s a market structure story. Injectable GLP-1s built a massive but friction-filled market: cold storage requirements, weekly injection routines, and access barriers kept a significant portion of eligible patients on the sidelines. Fewer than 1 in 10 people who could benefit from a GLP-1 are currently taking one. A pill changes that calculus dramatically, and a larger addressable patient pool creates downstream opportunities across the healthcare ecosystem.

For smaller companies building in adjacent spaces — weight management technology platforms, metabolic disease diagnostics, complementary therapeutics — this approval accelerates the market they’re betting on. Novo Nordisk’s early data already suggests the pill is expanding the obesity treatment market rather than simply cannibalizing injectable demand, with more than 600,000 prescriptions for the Wegovy pill recorded in March alone.

The Competitive Pressure Is Real

Lilly’s approval also puts pressure on every company in the obesity space without an oral option. Novo has a head start on the pill market but carries the food and water restriction disadvantage. Other GLP-1 developers — many of them smaller biotechs — now face an even higher innovation bar. The era of “we have a GLP-1” being sufficient is over. Differentiation by mechanism, convenience, side effect profile, or patient population is now the only viable path to relevance.

Lilly expects Foundayo approval in more than 40 countries over the next year and has invested more than $55 billion in manufacturing since 2020 to support global scale — a moat that smaller competitors cannot easily replicate, making niche differentiation even more critical for emerging players.

The oral GLP-1 market is now officially open. The question for small and microcap investors is which companies are building the infrastructure, tools, and therapies that benefit from a world where obesity treatment becomes a daily pill.

Biogen Banks $5.6 Billion on Apellis as Big Pharma M&A Appetite for Biotech Heats Up

Biogen (Nasdaq: BIIB) is making its most consequential portfolio move in years, announcing a definitive agreement to acquire Apellis Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: APLS) for $41.00 per share in cash — an upfront equity consideration of approximately $5.6 billion — plus a contingent value right (CVR) tied to future sales milestones for its flagship eye disease therapy. The deal closed out March with a statement: big pharma is hungry, and specialty biotech is on the menu.

The transaction carries an 86% premium to Apellis’ 90-day volume-weighted average stock price and a 35% premium to its 52-week high. It is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026.

What Biogen Is Getting

At the center of the deal are two commercialized complement-targeting therapies: SYFOVRE® (pegcetacoplan injection), approved for geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration, and EMPAVELI® (pegcetacoplan), approved across three rare immune-mediated conditions — C3 glomerulopathy (C3G), primary IC-MPGN, and paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH).

Together, the two drugs generated $689 million in combined net product revenue in 2025, with growth expected in the mid-to-high teens annually through at least 2028. For a company navigating revenue headwinds from its legacy MS portfolio, that near-term visibility is exactly what Biogen needed.

SYFOVRE holds particular strategic weight as the first-ever approved therapy for geographic atrophy — a progressive retinal disease affecting more than five million people globally. Long-term efficacy data shows the drug can delay GA lesion progression by approximately 1.5 years in key patient populations, giving the asset durable commercial runway. The GA space is one that smaller innovators are also actively pursuing. Ocugen (Nasdaq: OCGN), is developing a gene therapy approach targeting inherited retinal diseases — the kind of differentiated, mechanism-driven science that has increasingly attracted large-cap attention.

The Nephrology Angle

Beyond the immediate revenue story, the strategic rationale runs deeper into kidney disease. Apellis brings an established nephrology sales infrastructure that Biogen intends to leverage for felzartamab, its Phase 3 kidney disease candidate with a first trial readout expected in the first half of 2027.

EMPAVELI’s rare kidney disease approvals — including the only FDA-approved treatment for pediatric patients with C3G and the first approval for post-transplant C3G recurrence — underscore how defensible rare nephrology positions can be. Two other emerging growth companies are staking ground in adjacent kidney disease spaces: Unicycive Therapeutics (Nasdaq: UNCY), developing oxylanthanum carbonate for hyperphosphatemia in chronic kidney disease patients, and Eledon Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: ELDN), advancing therapies focused on reducing kidney transplant rejection. The Biogen-Apellis deal reinforces that nephrology is becoming a high-value destination for large-cap dealmaking.

A Market Signal Worth Noting

The Apellis acquisition didn’t land in a vacuum. Earlier today, Eli Lilly announced a separate agreement to acquire Centessa Pharmaceuticals for up to $47.00 per share — a deal valued at approximately $7.8 billion including contingent payments — to bolster its neuroscience pipeline in sleep-wake disorders. Two major biotech acquisitions announced on the same day signals something broader: pharmaceutical companies with strong balance sheets are actively scanning for de-risked, commercially validated or late-stage assets, and they’re willing to pay premium prices to get them.

For investors tracking small and microcap biotech, that backdrop matters. Companies building real clinical differentiation in immunology, nephrology, and ophthalmology are operating in exactly the spaces that large pharma is now paying billions to enter.

CVR Structure and Financial Outlook

The CVR entitles Apellis shareholders to two potential payments of $2 per share, contingent on SYFOVRE hitting $1.5 billion and $2 billion in annual global net sales between 2027 and 2030. Biogen expects the deal to be increasingly accretive to non-GAAP diluted EPS starting in 2027, with full de-leveraging targeted by end of 2027.